... ’—: ■ ■— ■'■"■v vww<-■ }».wr*rw*. 1The Chicago MaroonVolume 93, No. 45 The University of Chicago ©Copyright 1984 The Chicago Maroon Tuesday, April iu,Candidates vie for SG executive board spotsBy Rosemary BlinnIssues including StudentGovernment reform and im¬provement of student activi¬ties are the focal point of can¬didate platforms for StudentGovernment Executive Com¬mittee positions. Candidatesare mainly from the CAREand DEMON slates, with somestudents running independent¬ly.PHOTO BY ARA JELALIANChris HillCARE — CAmpus REform— is made up of present SGmembers including Chris Hillfor president. The slate wantsto expand graduate involve¬ment on campus, reform theMajor Activities Board (MAB)and pressure the administra¬tion for more student ser-The DEMON slate is headedby Mark Woo for president andBy Nathan SchoppaThe Student Government As¬sembly approved Thursday anamendment which would signi¬ficantly alter the method bywhich the Student GovernmentFinance Committee (SGFC)makes funding decisions.The amendment would givethe SGFC clear guidelineswhich could open up funding togroups that have been deniedit. SG Secretary Chris Hillcalled the proposed changes“revolutionary.”The amendment receivedthe exact number of votes itneeded to pass in the Asse¬mbly. Students voting inWednesday’s and Thursday’selections will vote on its finalratification.Law School representativeVincent Hillery proposed theamendment, which would alterArticle 5, Section 5 of the cur¬rent SG constitution.Hillery sees the amendmentas giving SGFC an “overall stands for what he terms “amore fun campus.” DEMONsupports more activities beingopen to students.The following are the candi¬dates’ qualifications, plans forreform, opinions and ideas.PRESIDENTChris Hill is a second-yearstudent in the college whoserved as freshman represen¬tative before being elected SGPHOTO BY JEFF TAYLORMark Woosecretary for this year. Heserves on four SG committeesincluding Academic Affairsand University Services. Hehas worked on plus/minusgrading, U of C Roundtable(discussions), the Solomonissue, and lack of handicappedaccess at the University.Hill supports a ProgramOutreach, an SG-planned pro¬gram, which would open moresense” to its purpose.“I think it is very importantto outline the purpose,” Hillerysaid. “Currently, things arevery specific; there is a lack ofan overall sense of what the Fi¬nance Committee is supposedto do.”Much of the discussion on theamendment focused on word¬ing which calls for SGFC tofund activities which “collec¬tively appeal” to the Universi¬ty’s students. According to Hil¬lery, this means any activityneed not have widespread ap¬peal; rather, only the group ofactivities which SGFC fundshave widespread appeal.The amendment calls uponSGFC to finance “activitiesand organizations to serve stu¬dents as vehicles throughwhich students seek support,identity, and personal expres¬sion.”“The idea is that there is arole of certain groups such asGALA (Gay and Lesbian Alli- communication between SGand the University communi¬ty. He wants MAB to haveelected members in addition toappointed ones, and be over¬seen by SG.Mark Woo is a third-yearstudent. He served as socialchairman for Bradbury Housein Shoreland. He said he doesnot think actual SG experienceis a necessary prerequisite tobeing SG President.Woo sees the SG president’srole as being primarily one ofproviding more activities forstudents. He pointed to the Fi¬nance Committee as havingtoo much negative control onstudent activities. He noted,“Rick Szesny has been atyrant as Finance Committeechair,” and cited WHPK fund¬ing cuts as an example of stu¬dent activities which are dis¬couraged. He sees graduatestudent activities as “basicallyinconsequential.” Woo wantsto change administration andSGFC policy to be more realis¬tic. He gave relaxation of theUniversity’s no-alcohol policyat College-sponsored functionsas one of his goals as presi¬dent.VICE PRESIDENTBrad Smith is a third-yearstudent in the College on theCARE slate. He currentlychairs the Ex-Libris Commit¬tee and has worked on theplus/minus grading issue.Smith cites his difierent activi¬ties on SG as best preparingance) andfpS (the Organiza¬tion of Black Students),” Hil¬lery said of the text.The proposed amendmentlists guidelines for SGFC toconsider in making funding de¬cisions, including “the extentof the expected. . .contributionto be made... to the Universitycommunity;” “the number ofstudents... to be benefited bythe activity; ” whether the costper student of the activity iscomparable to that of other ac¬tivities; “the extent to whichcontinued on page eightBy Frank LubyThis article is the third in aseries designed to report theprogress of the 11 task forceswhich comprise Project 1984,the pioneer project of theCenter for Curricular Thought.The task forces met through¬out the winter to evaluate thestate of the College and discusspossible changes. From April9-20 the task forces will holdmeetings open to students andfaculty to allow more inputinto these discussions, whichmay ultimately lead tochanges in the structure of theCollege of the University ofChicago.Philip Gossett, chairman ofthe Department of Music andof the Creative Arts task force,spoke of “the great difficultyin getting across to studentswhat is available here (in thecreative arts).” The CreativeArts task force divided its dis¬cussion between curricularand extracurricular activities,and the inability to make stu¬dents at large aware of perfor¬mances and opportunities in him for SG vice president.“I’m not tied to any one role,”he observed. He said thatCARE stands for diversity,noting that he opposed approx¬imately 50 percent of SGFC’sfunding decisions but thatthrough debate they (the Asse¬mbly) arrive at an agree¬ment.He advocates removingmonitors on Regenstein’s A-level from a union contract sotheir wages will be lowered.He would then raise Ex-Librisworker’s wages but eliminatetheir practice of eating asmuch of the food as they want,instituting a workers’ discountinstead.Marcus Asner is a third-yearstudent running on theDEMON slate. He has been anIHC member, served as amember of Bradbury HouseCouncil and as vice presidentof the U of C Chess Club.By Jeffrey TaylorMarvin L. Goldberger, presi¬dent of the prestigious Califor¬nia Institute of Technology(Cal Tech), today begins athree-day schedule of talks andluncheons as this quarter’sUniversity of Chicago VisitingFellow.Goldberger will participatethis afternoon in a discussionwith a group of about 20 under¬graduates on the topics “Scien¬tific Communication and Na¬tional Security” and “FederalSupport of Basic Research.”Other scheduled activitiesinclude a luncheon withmembers of the Maroon edito¬rial board, dinner with resi¬dents of Woodward Court, aninformal party in Lower Rick-ert House Wednesday night, adiscussion on “Careers inPhysics” and a public presen¬tation Thursday at 4:30 p.m. inEckhart 209 on “Science, Tech¬nology and National Securi¬ty.”Goldberger was a professorof physics at the University ofChicago from 1955 to 1957 andwas chairman of the PrincetonPhysics Department from 1970the arts on campus “has both¬ered me all the years I’ve beenmusic chairman,” Gossettsaid.Gossett cited the Maroon asthe “prime culprit” for the ob¬scurity of campus events in thecreative arts. The task force,he said, felt that “it’s unfortu¬nate in the growth of creativearts (that there is) muchPHOTO BY NEAL COHENWendy Olmstead In terms of the vice presi¬dent’s responsibilities, Asnerstressed the need to overseeSGFC. While he said he has notfelt the need to run for an SGoffice before, Asner noted thatSG has become increasingly“clannish and cliquish.” Hementioned funding inconsis¬tencies, citing that InquiryMagazine received only $25while the Juggling Club re¬ceived $200 in this past year,(other members of theDEMON party reiterated thispoint). “We need some freshblood in there,” he noted ofSG.Asner attacked Smith forwanting to take benefits awayfrom Ex-Libris members. Hesaid that Smith has taken morecredit for organizing Ex-Libristhan he deserves since it ismostly the manager’s respon¬sibility.to 1976. He joined Cal Tech asits president in 1978.Goldberger received hisPh.D. in physics from the U ofC in 1948 and has been awardedhonorary degrees by Carnegie-Marvin GoldbergerMellon University, the Univer¬sity of Notre Dame, the He-brew Union College,Occidental College and theUniversity of Judaism.greater interest in events else¬where,” and he felt that theMaroon makes a “consciouschoice” to have no more than“minimal interest in events inwhich students are involved.”In the task force’s efforts to“look at various aspects of cre¬ative life for students as par¬ticipants and as observers,”Gossett said that “the studentmedia (Maroon. WHPK)might help significantly” to in¬crease student awareness, be¬cause “there doesn’t seem tobe an attitude to have moreawareness of what is happen¬ing.”As a specific example, Gos¬sett referred to the profession¬al concerts of the Contem¬porary Chamber Players,saying “there is never any in¬terest in preparing people tohear them or become in¬volved.” He added as anotherexample that placing an arti¬cle on the Chicago SymphonyOrchestra “is much easier.continued on page 11InsideEditorialMaroon endorsementsfor SG elections page lou,ViewpointAn explanationof proposed changesin SGFC rules page fiveSG considers six amendmentsProject ’84 discussions continuecontinued on page 11Goldberger visits hereII1 ■ mmv * *. ** m 'Wm?M,Saturday Night Specialn SiIf god gives life so easily, why does he take it so slowly?My lover spends her last days on the bed trying to sit upShe does not know who I amShe remembers nothing of the last sixty years with meHer mind is gone, as they say . Hm..,>:V ■■H p,^i> "KMy legs hurt me, until I think that I can’t stand it any moreI cannot take care of herWhat are we going to do until we die? She can’t even play bridgeShe is a stranger and so am I.What were we like before? HiI bought a gun for protection against timeThe man who sold it to me didn’t even ask what it was forWhat could an 84 year-old man do with a gun?Bang, Bang.Steven AmsterdamOne We Called "UnderweatherffyW v ymm However uncertain we takelittle steps to reconcilethe divisions we tookto be inconvertable,though it seems possiblethis paper thin constructionthat makes us capableof withstanding weatheringhas become itself the gesturewhich we project publiclywhile behind the storm festersStill smiling reassuringly:“It will be alright, a lightdrizzle that will pass, surelyit will”, though the night’sshadows cross our tired bodiesin the sleeper we tipped for.So certain it was a phasewe were passing throughwe hoisted the battered caseswith their slippery stickersand as a game namedthe towns we past beforewe knew their real namesOn these slick rails drivingus forward over spongy groundsometimes the names we giveturn out to be their own.mmDavid Sullivan8— FRIDAY, APRIL 6, 1984—THE GREY CITY JOURNALThe Chicago MaroonVolume 93, No. 45 The University of Chicago ©Copyright 1984 The Chicago Maroon Tuesday, April iu, iy»4Candidates vie for SG executive board spotsBy Rosemary BlinnIssues including StudentGovernment reform and im¬provement of student activi¬ties are the focal point of can¬didate platforms for StudentGovernment Executive Com¬mittee positions. Candidatesare mainly from the CAREand DEMON slates, with somestudents running independent¬ly.PHOTO BY ARA JELALIANChris HillCARE — CAmpus REform— is made up of present SGmembers including Chris Hillfor president. The slate wantsto expand graduate involve¬ment on campus, reform theMajor Activities Board (MAB)and pressure the administra¬tion for more student ser-The DEMON slate is headedby Mark Woo for president andBy Nathan SchoppaThe Student Government As¬sembly approved Thursday anamendment which would signi¬ficantly alter the method bywhich the Student GovernmentFinance Committee (SGFC)makes funding decisions.The amendment would givethe SGFC clear guidelineswhich could open up funding togroups that have been deniedit. SG Secretary Chris Hillcalled the proposed changes“revolutionary.”The amendment receivedthe exact number of votes itneeded to pass in the Asse¬mbly. Students voting inWednesday’s and Thursday’selections will vote on its finalratification.Law School representativeVincent Hillery proposed theamendment, which would alterArticle 5, Section 5 of the cur¬rent SG constitution.Hillery sees the amendmentas giving SGFC an “overall stands for what he terms “amore fun campus.” DEMONsupports more activities beingopen to students.The following are the candi¬dates’ qualifications, plans forreform, opinions and ideas.PRESIDENTChris Hill is a second-yearstudent in the college whoserved as freshman represen¬tative before being elected SGPHOTO BY JEFF TAYLORMark Woosecretary for this year. Heserves on four SG committeesincluding Academic Affairsand University Services. Hehas worked on plus/minusgrading, U of C Roundtable(discussions), the Solomonissue, and lack of handicappedaccess at the University.Hill supports a ProgramOutreach, an SG-planned pro¬gram, which would open moresense” to its purpose.“I think it is very importantto outline the purpose,” Hillerysaid. “Currently, things arevery specific; there is a lack ofan overall sense of what the Fi¬nance Committee is supposedto do.”Much of the discussion on theamendment focused on word¬ing which calls for SGFC tofund activities which “collec¬tively appeal” to the Universi¬ty’s students. According to Hil¬lery, this means any activityneed not have widespread ap¬peal; rather, only the group ofactivities which SGFC fundshave widespread appeal.The amendment calls uponSGFC to finance “activitiesand organizations to serve stu¬dents as vehicles throughwhich students seek support,identity, and personal expres¬sion.”“The idea is that there is arole of certain groups such asGALA (Gay and Lesbian Alli- communication between SGand the University communi¬ty. He wants MAB to haveelected members in addition toappointed ones, and be over¬seen by SG.Mark Woo is a third-yearstudent. He served as socialchairman for Bradbury Housein Shoreland. He said he doesnot think actual SG experienceis a necessary prerequisite tobeing SG President.Woo sees the SG president’srole as being primarily one ofproviding more activities forstudents. He pointed to the Fi¬nance Committee as havingtoo much negative control onstudent activities. He noted,“Rick Szesny has been atyrant as Finance Committeechair,” and cited WHPK fund¬ing cuts as an example of stu¬dent activities which are dis¬couraged. He sees graduatestudent activities as “basicallyinconsequential.” Woo wantsto change administration andSGFC policy to be more realis¬tic. He gave relaxation of theUniversity’s no-alcohol policyat College-sponsored functionsas one of his goals as presi¬dent.VICE PRESIDENTBrad Smith is a third-yearstudent in the College on theCARE slate. He currentlychairs the Ex-Libris Commit¬tee and has worked on theplus/minus grading issue.Smith cites his different activi¬ties on SG as best preparingance) and ms (the Organiza¬tion of Black Students),” Hil¬lery said of the text.The proposed amendmentlists guidelines for SGFC toconsider in making funding de¬cisions, including “the extentof the expected. . .contributionto be made... to the Universitycommunity;” “the number ofstudents... to be benefitted bythe activity; ” whether the costper student of the activity iscomparable to that of other ac¬tivities; “the extent to whichcontinued on page eightBy Frank LubyThis article is the third in aseries designed to report theprogress of the 11 task forceswhich comprise Project 1984,the pioneer project of theCenter for Curricular Thought.The task forces met through¬out the winter to evaluate thestate of the College and discusspossible changes. From April9-20 the task forces will holdmeetings open to students andfaculty to allow more inputinto these discussions, whichmay ultimately lead tochanges in the structure of theCollege of the University ofChicago.Philip Gossett, chairman ofthe Department of Music andof the Creative Arts task force,spoke of “the great difficultyin getting across to studentswhat is available here (in thecreative arts).” The CreativeArts task force divided its dis¬cussion between curricularand extracurricular activities,and the inability to make stu¬dents at large aware of perfor¬mances and opportunities in him for SG vice president.“I’m not tied to any one role,”he observed. He said thatCARE stands for diversity,noting that he opposed approx¬imately 50 percent of SGFG’sfunding decisions but thatthrough debate they (the Asse¬mbly) arrive at an agree¬ment.He advocates removingmonitors on Regenstein’s A-level from a union contract sotheir wages will be lowered.He would then raise Ex-Librisworker’s wages but eliminatetheir practice of eating asmuch of the food as they want,instituting a workers’ discountinstead.Marcus Asner is a third-yearstudent running on theDEMON slate. He has been anIHC member, served as amember of Bradbury HouseCouncil and as vice presidentof the U of C Chess Club.By Jeffrey TaylorMarvin L. Goldberger, presi¬dent of the prestigious Califor¬nia Institute of Technology(Cal Tech), today begins athree-day schedule of talks andluncheons as this quarter’sUniversity of Chicago VisitingFellow.Goldberger will participatethis afternoon in a discussionwith a group of about 20 under¬graduates on the topics “Scien¬tific Communication and Na¬tional Security” and “FederalSupport of Basic Research.”Other scheduled activitiesinclude a luncheon withmembers of the Maroon edito¬rial board, dinner with resi¬dents of Woodward Court, aninformal party in Lower Rick-ert House Wednesday night, adiscussion on “Careers inPhysics” and a public presen¬tation Thursday at 4:30 p.m. inEckhart 209 on “Science, Tech¬nology and National Securi¬ty.”Goldberger was a professorof physics at the University ofChicago from 1955 to 1957 andwas chairman of the PrincetonPhysics Department from 1970the arts on campus “has both¬ered me all the years I’ve beenmusic chairman,” Gossettsaid.Gossett cited the Maroon asthe “prime culprit” for the ob¬scurity of campus events in thecreative arts. The task force,he said, felt that “it’s unfortu¬nate in the growth of creativearts (that there is) muchPHOTO BY NEAL COHENWendy Olmstead In terms of the vice presi¬dent’s responsibilities, Asnerstressed the need to overseeSGFC. While he said he has notfelt the need to run for an SGoffice before, Asner noted thatSG has become increasingly“clannish and cliquish.” Hementioned funding inconsis¬tencies, citing that InquiryMagazine received only $25while the Juggling Club re¬ceived $200 in this past year,(other members of theDEMON party reiterated thispoint). “We need some freshblood in there,” he noted ofSG.Asner attacked Smith forwanting to take benefits awayfrom Ex-Libris members. Hesaid that Smith has taken morecredit for organizing Ex-Libristhan he deserves since it ismostly the manager’s respon¬sibility.to 1976. He joined Cal Tech asits president in 1978.Goldberger received hisPh.D. in physics from the U ofC in 1948 and has been awardedhonorary degrees by Carnegie-JMarvin GoldbergerMellon University, the Univer¬sity of Notre Dame, the He-brew Union College,Occidental College and theUniversity of Judaism.greater interest in events else¬where,” and he felt that theMaroon makes a “consciouschoice” to have no more than“minimal interest in events inwhich students are involved.”In the task force’s efforts to“look at various aspects of cre¬ative life for students as par¬ticipants and as observers,”Gossett said that “the studentmedia (Maroon, WHPK)might help significantly” to in¬crease student awareness, be¬cause “there doesn’t seem tobe an attitude to have moreawareness of what is happen¬ing.”As a specific example, Gos¬sett referred to the profession¬al concerts of the Contem¬porary Chamber Players,saying “there is never any in¬terest in preparing people tohear them or become in¬volved.” He added as anotherexample that placing an arti¬cle on the Chicago SymphonyOrchestra “is much easier.”continued on page 11InsideEditorialMaroon endorsementsfor SG elections page fourViewpointAn explanationof proposed changesin SGFC rules page fiveSG considers six amendmentsProject ’84 discussions continuecontinued on page 11Goldberger visits hereAPRIL 9APRIL 22FACULTY AND STUDENTS CAN SHARE A MEAL AT ONE OF THE FOLLOWING FINE HYDE PARKRESTAURANTS, AND RECEIVE THE FOLLOWING DISCOUNT OFF THE TOTAL BILL:Agora Resturant 15% Medici on Harper 20%1335 E. 57th St. 5211 S. Harper Ct.947-8309 667-7394Open for breakfast, lunch & dinner Find us! You'll like us! Fine food, full barGreek & American Cuisine. 6:30a.m.-10p.m. (a best-kept secret)! ll:30a.m.-10p.m.; 12a.m. F&SBlue Gargoyle io% Mellow Yellow Rest. 15%5655 S. University 1508 E. 53rd St.955-4108 667-20 00Soups, sandwiches, entrees plus much more Freshly prepared wholesome food at reasonableBurrito supremo1 M-F lla.m.-2p.m. prices. Breakfast, lunch & dinner specials.Far East Kitchen 15% Morry’s in Hutch io%1654 E. 53rd St. Hutchinson Commons955-2200 1131 E. 57th Ct.Try something spicy, .our delicious Mandarin 493-2808dishes! Tues-Sun. lla.m,-12:30p.m.Harper Square Rest. io% Full deli & cafeteria - the widest rangeof foods on the entire campus.1501 E. 53rd St. Chez Morry’s (lunch) io%241-6592 1131 E. 57th St. (dinner) 15%Open for breakfast, lunch & dinner seven days 493-2270a week. 7a.m.-10p.m.Hemingway’s Rest. 15% Fine dining in the elegance, greeneryand privacy of Hutchinson Commons.1550 E. 55th St. Orly’s Restaurant io%752-3633 5498 Hyde Park Blvd.Open for lunch & dinner. Daily specials 643-5500and service barHouse of Eng Rest. 15% Fresh meat, seafood, and pastries, openfor lunch Tu.-Sun., dinner 7 days a week53rd St., S. Shore Dr. The Pub 15%324-6200 Ida Noyes HallCantonese & American food. Cocktail lounge, (over 21 only)"Dining in the Sky U:30a.m.-12:30p.m.Ida’s Cafe 15% Pizza, beer, and wine at reasonable prices.Happy hour daily. 4:30-la.m. M-Sat.Ida Noyes Hall Salonica Restaurant io%1212 E. 59th St. 1440 E. 57th St.962-9736 752-3899Life on a low budget never tasted Open for breakfast, lunch & dinnersbetter A delicious meal at student-budget prices. 6.30a.m.-10p.m. Greek & American food.Mallory’s Rest. io% Thai 55 Restaurant io%1525 E. 53rd St. 1607 E. 55th St.241-5600 363-7119Atop the Hyde Park Bank & Trust offering We serve the best Thai food in town1fine dining in an exquisite atmosphere. Sun.-Thurs. lla.m.-lOp.m./lla.m.-llp.m. F&SMedici on 57th 15% Tipsuda Restaurant 15%1450 E. 57th St. 1649 E. 55th St.667-7394 667-5423Burgers, pizza, dialogue abound in this The very first and most authentic ThaiHyde Park landmark 7:30a.m.-Midnight; 1a.m. F&S restaurant in Hyde Park. Dinner 4p.m,-10p.m.To receive the discount, just present a coupon to the waiter or cashier before you payCoupons may be picked up at: Student Activities Office (Ida Noyes 210), Dean ofStudents Office (Administration 219), Adviser's Desk (Harper 280), and Reynolds ClubBox Office.Please don't embarrass the restaurant someowners may ask for faculty and student I.P.'s.Sponsored by Student GovernmentAdvertisement paid for by the Student Activities FeeChicago Maroon—Tuesday, April 10, 1984Opportunities weekThe Office of Career and PlacementServices is sponsoring “Off-CampusOpportunities Week” April 9-13 for un¬dergraduates interested in summerand academic term off-campus intern¬ships and jobs. Representatives fromdifferent programs will hold informa¬tion meetings in Reynolds Club 201.“Internships: How to Get Started”will be held Wednesday at noon, and“Internships in Legislative and Execu¬tive Branches of Government” will beat 4 p.m. Wednesday.Thursday’s programs are “Expedi¬tions Around the World” at noon and“Public Service Internships” at 4p.m.Programs scheduled for Friday are“Business Internships for ’84-’85 Sopho¬mores” at noon, and “Internships in Fi¬nancial Planning” at 4 p.m. For moreinformation, call 962-7042.Free choir concertThe Winston-Salem State UniversityChoir will give a free concert April 12 at8 p.m. at the First Unitarian Church,57th and Woodlawn.The performance is sponsored by theChicago Children’s Choir and will beconducted by native Chicagoan RobertMorris.For more information, call 324-8300.On conjugal sexualityNatalie Zemon Davis, the first lec¬turer in the Forum for Feminist Schol¬arship spring quarter lecture series,will speak on “The Sacred and Conju¬gal Sexuality in 16th Century France,”Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in Swift LectureHall. Davis is the Henry Charles LeaProfessor of History at Princeton Uni¬versity.Her work has focused on the socialhistory of the Reformation in Lyon;using local history she has traced classand gender relationships in early mod¬ern cultural and religious life. She hasrecently written two books, Culture andSociety in Early Modern France andThe Return of Martin Guerre, and was an historical consultant for the film bythe same name.There are four lectures in the seriesthis quarter. The next speaker will beJane Mansbridge, professor of politicalscience at Northwestern University,who will speak on the Equal RightsAmendment. The lectures are fundedby the University of Chicago Women’sBoard.Sidney LensVietnam War forumA forum to discuss the Vietnam Warand the “war at home” will be heldApril 12 at 7:30 p.m. in the Home Roomof International House. Sponsored byCAUSE and funded by SGFC, the pan¬elists will include both Vietnam veter¬ans and anti-war activists.Vincent Gaughan served as a firstlieutenant in Vietnam, and is now aCook County Judge Advocate andmember of the American Legion.Barry Romo also served in Vietnam,and upon returning helped found Viet¬nam Vets Against the War. StewartHerman, a conscientious objector,worked in Vietnam as the provincialrepresentative of Vietnam ChristianService and speaks fluent Vietnamese.Bradford Lyttle is a Quaker-pacifist,^mUsic^musiomUsic^u3•32•cu332U*32-cO332 THE. UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGODEPARTMENT of MUSICPresents:Thursday, April 12 - Noontime Concert Series12:15 p.m., Goodspeed Recital HallBat Quartet: Mark Hohnstreiter and Liz Lombardi, violins;David Budil, viola; John Edwards, cello.Gershwin: Lullabye; Beethoven: String Quartet, op.130;Tedesca: Alta Danza; Scarlatti. Sonata a Quattro; Cage:Quodlibet.Admission is free.Friday, April 13 - Jaap Schroder, Baroque Violin8.00 p.m., Mandel HallWith Elaine Thornburgh, harpsichord.Music by Schop, Uccellini, Lonati, Frescobaldi, Corelli,J.S. Bach.$9; student $5. Tickets and information available at theDepartment of Music Concert Office, GoH 310; 962-8068.UPCOMING CONCERTSThursday, April 19 - Noontime Concert Series12:15 p.m., Goodspeed Recital HallNew Music Ensemble - Chris Coleman, conductor.Milhaud: La Creation du Monde.Admission is free.Thursday, April 26 - Noontime Concert Series12:15 p.m., Goodspeed Recital HallSoprano Rebecca Kobfick, and friends.Music by Dowland and HandelAdmission is free.Friday, April 27 - Contemporary Chamber Players8:o0 p.m., Mandel HallRalphy Shapey, music director; cosponsor: The FrommMusic Foundation.Soloists: Elsa Chariston, soprano; Barbara Haffner, cello.Deborah Drattell: Alone (world premiere of a Fromm Foun¬dation Commission); Richard Wemick: Cello Concerto;and a Varese Centenary Celebration - Offrandres /Ecuatorial.For free tickets: send request and self-addressed stampedenvelope to the Department of Music Concert Office, 5845S. Ellis Ave. 60637.Saturday, April 28 - Cathy Heifetz Memorial Concert8:00 p.m., Bond ChapelProgram of chamber music including the Brass Section ofthe University Symphony Orchestra, the Bon TempoSingers, and others.Admission is free 2£ot>3:&n£pC/>o* music^MUsic^MUsic^ and Sidney Lens is an author and editorof The Progressive magazine. Opendiscussion will follow.Nuclear freeze lectureThe First Congressional District Nu¬clear Freeze Coalition will hold itsmonthly meeting Wednesday at 7:30p.m. in the University Church, 5655 S.University Ave. Joshua Handler of theBulletin of Atomic Scientists will pres¬ent a lecture entitled “Reagan’s ‘StarWars’ Weapons Systems: The LatestThing in Nuclear Madness.” For moreinformation, call 667-1409.Children wantedThe Other Theatre Group is lookingfor two girls, ages 5-10, for its producti¬on of “Oedipus Rex.” We need themevenings for the week of April 15-21.Call Scott Johnson, 324-3957, or Ron Ed¬wards, 753-2240 (*1915), if you can helpus.On worker capitalismRobert Stern, professor of organiza¬tional behavior and sociology at theNew York State School of Industrialand Labor Relations, Cornell Universi¬ty, will speak on “Worker Capitalismand Worker Participation in Redeve¬loping the US Economy,” Thursday at4 p.m. in Pick Lounge. Stern has con¬ducted an extensive study of workerownership in the United States.The lecture is sponsored by theCenter for the Study of Industrial Socie¬ties. For more information, call753-4809.On ERA and abortionJohn T. Noonan Jr., professor of lawand legal historian at the University ofCalifornia-Berkeley, will speak on“ERA and Abortion: the Implications”Friday at 4:15 p.m. in Law Schoolclassroom 2.Noonan will report testimony he gavebefore the US Senate in January re¬garding the legal precedents alreadyestablished by rulings on state ERAs with wording similar to the currentlyproposed federal Equal Rights Amend¬ment. Alan Donagan, Phyllis Fay Hor¬ton Professor of Humanities and pro¬fessor of philosophy at U of C, willintroduce Noonan.Noonan’s teaching specialties are inJurisprudence, legal history, the legalprofession, and slavery in America. Hehas served as an expert on populationpolicy for the Ford and RockefellerFoundations and the Population Coun¬cil. His most recent books include APrivate Choice: Abortion in the Seven¬ties (1979), The Antelope: The Ordealof the Recaptured Africans in the Ad¬ministrations of James Monroe andJohn Quincy Adams (1977), and Per¬sons and Masks of the Law: Cardozo,Holmes, Jefferson and Wythe asMakers of the Masks.Jewish photo groupThe Jewish PhotodocumentaryGroup is looking for artists, historians,sociologists, and anyone who is inter¬ested in documenting the Jewish com¬munity through the media of still photo¬graphy or in learning the art of photodocumentation from start to finish.Murray M. Mattenson will conductan organizational meeting April 10 at 8p.m. at Hillel House. For more infor¬mation, call Ami Humphries at 324-9009or 346-6700.Kinzie poetry readingPoet Mary Kinzie will give a readingof her works April 12 at 7 p.m. Thereading, sponsored by Chicago Review,will be held in Classics 47. A receptionwill follow.Kinzie is the director of the_creativewriting program at Northwestern Uni¬versity, where she has taught since1975. She writes a quarterly review col¬umn in the American Poetry Review,and is a former executive editor of Tri-Quarterly. Her poems have appearedin Poetry, The New Republic, and YaleReview. Her book. The Threshold of theYear (University of Missouri Press.1982), won the 1982 Devins Award forPoetry.The Chicago Maroonannounces the election of a Marooneditor-in-chief for 1984-85, to be heldTUESDAY, APRIL 10, at 5:45 p.m.The following are members-in-good-standing* eligible to vote:Edward AchuckJamie AllenMichael AronsonAbigail AsherStephanie BaconRosemary BlinnMark BlockerPhil CafaroAnthony CashmanMaxwell ChiShong ChowWally DabrowskiMichael ElliottArthur U. EllisPat FineganPaul FloodRussel ForsterJoel GeffinPhilip GlistCliff Grammich Audrey GuzikJesse HalvorsenDon HaslamEdward HernstadtKeith HorvathAnna B. HupertAra JelalianJonathan KatzBruce KingVictor KingMichael KotzeSondra KruegerJoy LangstonLinda LeeCathy LeTourneauMike LevinFrank LubyL.D. LurveyRainer MackJeffrey MakosNadine McGann Campbell McGrathDennis MiserKC MorrisBrian MulliganRavi Raj maneBurt RosenDan SakuraJoshua SalisburyLeah SchlesingerNathan SchoppaGeoff SherryCassandra SmithiesJohanna StoyvaEllyn StreedDavid SullivanJeffrey TaylorJim TnompsonHilary TillBob TravisWilliam WeaverDinner, on the Maroon, will follow Tuesday'selection meeting.There will also be a meeting to discuss theMaroon Constitution SUNDAY, APRIL 15, at8:00 p.m. (time subject to change). Those listedabove are strongly urged to attend.•To be a member-in-good-standing, one must be a REGISTERED STUDENT. Names listed above willhe rK«w-ifdwt time o* tbe electionThe Chicago Maroon—Tuesday. April 10. 1984—3LETTERSPHOTO BY KC MORRISMembers of the CARE slate (clockwise from top left) Chris Hill, RickSzesny, Brad Smith, Sunnie Quijada, and Chris Gomez.Take CARE of SGTo the editor:It is a tradition at the University ofChicago for many students to regardStudent Government lightly and for afew students to take it seriously. This isparticularly well illustrated this elec¬tion with the opposir" parties ofDEMON and CARE. St lent Govern¬ment can be either a playground or anactive political group financing studentactivities and working for a strong stu¬dent voice.I vote to allow those who want thework, those who share a commitment,and those who have proven their abili¬ ties to bear the responsibilities of Stu¬dent Government for the upcomingyear. I, therefore, endorse the candi¬dates of the CARE party. The accom¬plishments of each of the CARE candi¬dates reveal the diversity of talents,concerns, and interests which they willbring to their offices.For two years, Chris Hill, has workedfor communication and interactionamong students, faculty and adminis¬trators. Some of his efforts are clearlyvisible: the SG bulletin boards and thesupervisory committee for Food Ser-continued on page fiveSave Hyde Park sidewalksTo the editor :As president of the Society for thePrevention of Cruelty to Sidewalks, Ifeel it is my duty to express my supportfor the only group of candidates who re¬main faithful to the cause of pure side¬walks — the DEMON Party. As thepresident of the Society, I have person¬ally inspected the sidewalks around theDEMON Party headquarters and foundthem in perfect condition. I have talkedto candidate Woo and Candidate Asnerabout their plans for the future of Stu¬dent Government and have found theirplans best suited to the protection ofsidewalks. Mr. Woo and Mr. Asnerhave developed a plan for the defenseof the university community that willdeter nuclear strikes from MIT andCal-Tech, prevent the hegemony ofSouth Side street gangs, while protect¬ing our sidewalks from the hazardswhich usually accompany these mea¬sures like tank tracks, empty shellsand gum wrappers. Mr. Asner, theformer treasurer of our society, is com¬mitted to repair old sidewalks and tobuild new ones on the Midway. In re¬sponse to the MAB issue, Mr. Asnerhopes to use MAB to accomplish theseends. He believes that the main pur¬pose of MAB should be to institute intoevery student a. deep seeded love andrespect for sidewalks. As president ofour society, I heartily approve of Mr.Asner’s and the DEMON’S progressiveattitude to sidwalks.The Society for the Prevention ofCruely to Sidewalks emphatically en¬dorses the DEMON Party for Student Government. We feel that the only hopefor our campus’s sidewalks lie with theDEMONS. We cannot in good con¬science support any group of reformers(Isn’t reform supposed to change thegovernment?) or any other dumb bun¬nies who do not care about pure side¬walks. Vote DEMON! The future of oursidewalks depends upon it.J. Joseph DonermeyerPresident, Society forthe Prevention of Crueltyto Sidewalks Our SG endorsementsThis year’s Maroon endorsements of SG candidates are relativelyeasy to make compared to those of years past. A few of the candidatesactually know more about Student Government policies and proceduresthan do staff members of the Maroon.For president, we endorse Chris Hill. A second-year student in theCollege, Hill has already done more for students here as SG secretarythan many recent SG presidents and vice-presidents have done in theirown years in office. Hill is concerned, capable, and energetic, and has arecord of commitment towards bettering campus life. He has taken astrong position on many issues affecting students here, and is not afraidto voice his opinions.Still, he has formed a coalition of SG members with diverse ideas andcapabilities. He is able to work closely even with those of opposing view¬points, as well as with administrators who are slow to effect change.Hill’s opponent, Mark Woo, has no grasp of what the SG presidentdoes or can do. He is running on a platform of bringing more parties tocampus, and would probably use his influence to fund a frivolous at¬tempt to change the face of the University at the expense of many viablestudent organizations.The race for vice-president is a much closer one, but our choice isBrad Smith. Smith is qualified, and experienced, and takes the positionseriously. We have no doubt that he would carry out his duties effec¬tively.Marcus Asner is also a serious candidate for office, and is seeminglyorganized and enthusiastic. He has experience holding campus office,but does not seem to perceive the precise workings of SG.In the position of treasurer, Chris Gomez has proven this year that shecan fulfill the duties of her office and take on other duties as necessary.She has been a valuable contributor to Finance Committee discussion,and shows promise for continued commitment to SG.The race for secretary is the hardest to judge. Both candidates arefriendly, outspoken, and thoroughly involved in campus activities. New¬ton Hall’s list of experience in campus organizations is impressive to us,and current members of Student Government are equally impressed byhis credentials.Hall’s record in SG, however, is marred by his having been pushed torun by self-serving student groups, both in this race and previously.Sunnie Quijada, a first-year student in the College, is our choice forsecretary. She is amply suited for the task of improving SG’s imageamong students. Her qualifications are numerous, although her involve¬ment on campus is not as extensive as Hall’s.In the race for finance chair, no challenger to the incumbent ex¬presses ideas, experience, or understanding of the position sufficient toqualify him to serve as chair of that committee which allocates 60 per¬cent of the Student Activities Fee.Rick Szesny is the only candidate in many years to combine organiza¬tion with thoughtful consideration for student budgets. He is highlyskilled as an arbitrator, and makes a point of being fair.Szesny is willing to stand up for the position of his committee, both inAssembly meetings and in conference with administrators. He hasearned the respect of people he has dealt with in many different situa¬tions. He has worked to unify the Finance Committee, and has mini¬mized the number of disgruntled student groups this year.In years past, the Maroon questioned Szesny’s ability to work alongwith students, but his record this year as finance chair has allowed us toendorse him without any reservations whatsoever.Incumbent president’s picks for officeTo the editor:I’d like to underscore the importanceof the Student Government’s election.It is crucial that we choose intelligentand aware representatives for our solerepresentative and legislative body.Though certain inherent constraints re¬duce the effectiveness of the organiza¬tion in some ways, SG should be and isbecoming the best mechanism for anindividual to affect aspects of Universi¬ty policy and campus life.Also, many sometimes regard SG asa political body. Granted that as a re¬sponsible organization everyone has aright to speak, vote, etc., but the nega¬tive elements (e.g. political bargain¬ing, empty rhetoric) aren’t a signifi¬cant part of the group. SG is more of aconsensual organization where wework to plan projects, improve the ca¬pability of other groups to do so, and at-The Chicago MaroonThe Chicago Maroon is the official student newspaper of the University of Chicago. It ispublished twice per week, on Tuesdays and Fridays. The offices of the Maroon are in IdaNoyes Hall, rooms 303 and 304. Phone 962-9555.Anna HupertEditorJeffrey TaylorManaging EditorCliff GrammichNews EditorMichael ElliottNews EditorSondra KruegerFeatures Editor Frank LubySports EditorJesse HalvorsenGrey City Journal EditorBrian MulliganGrey City Journal EditorArthur U. EllisPhotography EditorKC MorrisPhotography Editor Chris ScottAdvertising ManagerRobin TotmanOffice ManagerJoshua SalisburyBusiness ManagerLinda LeeProduction ManagerCampbell McGrathChicago Literary Review EditorAssociate Editors: Rosemary Blinn, Hilary TillContributors: Wally Dabrowski, Paul Flood, Tim Goodell, John Kotz, Mike Kotze BurtRosen, Leah Schlesinger, Nathan Schoppa, Bob Travis, Mike Troy. tempt to formulate input into adminis¬trative policies.Moving to the elections at hand, it isunfortunate, in a sense, that the choicesare so clear because of the dearth ofserious competition. I hadn’t plannedto make an endorsement as I didn’twish to continue a practice of passingthe mantle of leadership to a chosensuccessor, as it were. Nevertheless, inorder to counter any malaise that mayresult from this competitive lack, thereare several people of particularystrong quality, who I would like to men¬tion. Namely, Chris Hill, Brad Smith,and Christina Gomez are extremelyknowledgeable and committedmembers of Student Government.Their experience in framing legisla¬tion/resolutions, working with the ad¬ministration and student groups, andtheir general support of SG as a forumand service organization are crucialfor our self-governance. Though I dis¬agree with elements of their “plat¬form,” their open-mindedness miti¬gates any unproductive adherence toany unrealistic or perhaps less thanuseful programs.This latter idea points to one otheraspect of SG, or rather to the very char¬acter of the organization. A StudentGovernment can only do as much as itsmembers are willing to give. There areno professional student administratorshere (with the possible exception of ourOmbudsman). In order to have astrong collective group, therefore, youshould elect responsible representa¬tives, carefully consider any referen¬da, and participate in SG by helping toform its priorities, and participating inits activities.In addition to endorsing Chris, Brad, and Christina, and reminding you ofyour responsibilities in SG, I’d like todraw your attention briefly to the re¬ferenda on the ballot. There are fouramendments:1) One proposed amendment wouldrequire no member of the SFA Court toserve also on the Executive Committee(i.e. the five officers and the committeechairs). It is a straightforward propos¬al aimed at preventing any conflict ofinterests.2) An amendment that would essen¬tially delete a minimum of people required to form an electoral unit. Asconstituted, representatives to the As¬sembly are elected according to resi¬dence for undergraduates and accord¬ing to school/division affiliation forgraduates. Each dorm with a popula¬tion over 150, school, and division“gets” a representative — the remain¬ing 27 seats or so are then allocated ac¬cording to the relative population ofthese individual constituencies. Thisproposal would delete the 150 provision.Thus Breckinridge, Blackstone, andGreenwood would get at least one rep¬resentative each instead of “sharing”one as it presently is structured.3) A clarifying amendment, whichwould have the Constitution explicitlystate that there are 50 representativesand 5 officers, as is presently providedfor in practise.4) The longest amendment concernsthe outline of SG’s Finance Committee.Please take the time to read it. Also,there should be another letter in thissection describing it in greater detail.In short, please vote and do so wise¬ly-Joe WalshSG President4—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, April 10, 1984An amendment to make SGFC more flexibleBy Vincent E. HilleryA very important proposed constitutional amend¬ment to the Constitution of the Student Associationconcerning the funding of activities by the StudentGovernment Finance Committee has been approvedby the Student Government Assembly and will be onthe ballot in this week’s general election. The amend¬ment makes several changes in the requirements forfunding which warrant the adoption of the amend¬ment. Unfortunately the amendment is too long andintricate to be explained here in detail. However, asauthor of the amendment, and as a representative inthe SG Assembly and member of the Finance Com¬mittee, I would like to summarize the amendmentand suggest several important reasons why it shouldbe approved by the student body.The current SG Constitution provides the FinanceCommittee with little guidance as to how the Com¬mittee should go about selecting activities to be fund¬ed with the 60 percent of the money Student Govern¬ment collects from the students through the fivedollar per quarter per Student Activities Fee and dis¬burses. The Constitution provides procedural in¬structions, but simply does not articulate any sub¬stantive standards that the Finance Committee is tofollow, with the exception of a proscription againstfunding “religious activities” or “activities of a non-University political nature.”As a result of this vagueness the criteria for fund¬ing remain a mystery to most students, many re¬quests for funding turn on subjective evaluations of aproposed activity and its potential political over¬tones, and several valuable activities go unfundedbecause they are considered “political.” The Fi¬nance Committee has not been at fault here. TheCommittee has done the best job that can be expect¬ed given the paucity of direction the Constitution pro¬vides.The proposed amendment remedies these failingsby (1) delineating two sets of standards that theCommittee is to follow or consider. (2) focusing thefunding process away from the political aspects of anactivity, and (3) carefully liberalizing the range ofactivities, particularly quasi-political activities, thatcan be funded. These changes are embodied in theproposed subsections 1, m, n, o, and p of ARTICLE VSection 5 of the Constitution.Subsection 1 explicates the types of activities thatare considered to be “activities” for purposes offunding, and sets out four broad purposes of the Stu¬dent Activities Fee which are intended to guide dis¬position of Student Funds. These purposes includeusing Student Funds so they reach a broad cross-sec¬tion of students, interests, and viewpoints when thefunded activities are taken collectively. Hence, a sin¬gle activity need not appeal to a broad cross-sectionof students, interests, and viewpoints to receive fund¬ing so long as the composite of activities funded overtime equitably does so. The issue whether an individ¬ual activity must be university-wide in appeal to befunded has been a serious point of contention in thepast. Proposed subsection 1 should lay the matter torest in a way that benefits students and the universi¬ty community. Subsection 1 also explicity recognizesthe contribution that “support” groups (such as eth¬nic organizations, women’s groups, and groups likeGALA) make to students. The current Constitution isseriously flawed because it contains no explication ofthe intended puposes of the Student Activites Fee.and the disbursement of Student Funds.Subsection m delineates four factors that are to beconsidered by the Finance Committee as part of itsfunding decision. These factors include considera¬tion of the number of students expected to be benefi¬ ted by an activity, the extent to which funds are oth¬erwise available for an activity, and the cost of anactivity per student expected to be benefitted by anactivity as compared to the cost per student of simi¬lar activities. (The last factor would operate so that,for example, theatrical activities would be measuredagainst similar theatrical and related activities, andintercollegiate debate and Model UN activities wouldbe compared with other similar activities.) The list-CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENTSThe following amendment to Article VII, Section 1“a” was approved by acclamation to be placed onthe Spring ballot. Its purpose is to prevent any poten¬tial conflict of interest by forbidding SFA Courtmembers to serve also on the Executive Council.a. Six members of the Student Association, tobe elected by the students at the SpringQuarter election. All shall serve one yearterms commencing on July 1 and terminat¬ing June 30. A sitting Court member may beneither a member of the Executive Councilnor the Assembly, nor may any sitting Courtmember seek office in a Student Govern¬ment election, except by seeking reelectionto the Court.The following amendment to Article II, Section 14,Paragraph a, subparagraph 1 was approved by theAssembly to be placed on the Spring ballot. Its pur¬pose is to abolish the requirement that a University-controlled College Residence Hall have at least 150residents in order to qualify as an electoral unit withits own representatives. This would end the situationwhere a number of very small but widely separateddorms are represented by the same representatives,who usually can’t represent such a diverse consti¬tuency (e.g. Breckinridge, Blackstone, and Green¬wood) very well.To read:One unit for each University-controlled Col¬lege Residence Hall.Also included in this amendment is the deletion ofArticle II, Section 14, Paragraph a, subparagraph 2,and the renumbering of subparagraphs 3 through'5.The following amendment as an addition to ArticleII was approved by acclamation by the Assembly tobe placed on the Spring ballot. It is merely a techni¬cal clarification of exactly how many Assemblymembers there are, a question which becomes im¬portant when the apportionment of representativeseats is calculated, and which the current languageof the Constitution is vague on.Add: Article II, Section 1, renumbering currentSections 1 through 18 to read: The Assemblyshall consist of fifty (50) Representatives andthe five (5) Officers of the Student Associa¬tion.Also change Article II, Section 14, Preambula¬tory paragraph to read: Assembly Representa¬tives and the Officers of the Student Associa¬tion shall be elected at the Spring election, to beheld not earlier than the third nor later than thefifth week of Spring Quarter, as follows: ed factors are to be considered by the Finance Com¬mittee; they would not constitute rigid require¬ments. Some flexibility is retained by allowing theFinance Committee to augment these constitutionalfactors with other factors to be written into the By-Laws of the Finance Committee. Once again, the cur¬rent Constitution fails to specify any guiding fac¬tors.Subsection n contains the present proscriptionagainst funding religious activities with only minormodification.Subsection o establishes a limitation on fundingcertain political activities, but does so through a sig¬nificant departure from the present proscriptionagainst funding political activities. Currently the op¬erational meat of the constitutional political pro¬scription is in the Finance Committee By-Laws sincethe constitutional provision is abbreviated andvague. The by-laws provide in part that an activity ispolitical and therefore ineligible for funding if “a sig¬nificant portion of the activity is directed to influenc¬ing public legislation or public policy,” or “a majorpurpose of the activity is to promote a particularideology or a particular viewpoint.” The practice ofworking with these provisions has led to the inescap¬able conclusion that they are potentially limitless intheir scope, difficult to apply because of the subjec¬tive inquiry required, and open to inconsistent appli¬cation. Proposed Subsection o redirects the inquiryto the objective “primary effect” of an activity andlimits ineligible activities to those that (1) involvecandidates or political parties, (2) “solicit support”for “organized efforts” to alter public law, or (3) ad¬vocate the “active violation” of law. Subsection owill allow a wide range of student groups to presentactivities that explore particular political questionsand positions that are today not possible because theFinance Committee By-Laws require such activitiesto include a “formal presentation of the opposingviews” which experience has shown is burdensometo student groups and often not possible. Everyoneshould benefit from the amendent’s reorientation ofthe relevant inquiry.Subsection p re-enforces the operation of Subsec¬tion o by explicitly allowing an activity which pres¬ents a particular view without concurrently present¬ing opposing viewpoints to be funded, provided theactivity otherwise qualifies for funding. If the Uni¬versity of Chicago is to be a “community of ideas,” itis essential that such activities be eligible for fund¬ing, and the proposed amendment would so pro¬vide.The SG Assembly debated this proposed amend¬ment at length after months of wrestling with theissues involved. Through the votes of two-thirds of itsrepresentatives voting, it concluded the amendmentdeserved to become part of the Constitution. Gradu¬ate and undergraduate representatives with widelydisparate perspectives agreed the amendment isnecessary. They, along with I. hope that you will voteon Wednesday and Thursday to adopt the amend¬ment. Through it order can replace the mystery andoccasional chaos surrouding funding guidelines.More importantly, students and the university com¬munity will directly benefit. I urge your vote for theamendment.Vincent Hillery is a third-year law student and agraduate of the College. He currently serves as LawSchool representative to SG and is a member of theFinance Committee.Others signing this letter included Chris Hill. JohnBotscharow, Sunnie Quijada, Kal Alston, and BradSmith.Uhl: ‘Szesny for SG ’CAREcontinued from page fourvice. Many of his efforts, including in¬numerable meetings, letters, phonecalls, with deans and student groupsare little known. Chris’ talents, coupledwith the energy of the many dorm anddivision representatives running withhim, promise an active and successfulyear.Brad Smith will bring to the office ofVice-President a familiarity with nu¬merous campus issues. As chairman ofExLibris coffeeshop in the Regenstein,Brad worked for better communicationwith Library authorities. Results in¬cluded the extension of hours of theshop during finals and a commitmentto more hours and a extended menu. Asa member of the Representation Com¬mittee, his efforts helped to placemajor issues of grading and the read¬ing period before the student body.Chris Gomez, as an incumbent, hasalready proven her competency. Forthe first time in many years StudentGovernment has been as responsible for its money and budgets as it expectsother student groups to be.Sunnie Quijada served on various ac¬tivities including Activities Committeeand Representation Committee. Herparticipation was exemplary for aFreshman Representative.Rick Szesny’s contribution ofhundreds of hours to the Finance Com¬mittee illustrates his commitment to aresponsible distribution of StudentGovernment’s limited funds. The posi¬tion of Finance Chairman requires aworking knowledge of prices, activi¬ties, and campus facilities. No othercandidate for Finance Chair can bringcomparable expertise to this office.In the midst of a highly academic andindividualistic community, there exista few individuals willing to devote agreat deal of time to campus issues andactivity. As I have strongly supportedtheir efforts throughout the year, Istrongly endorse their candidacy.I wish the members of CARE the bestof luck in accomplishing their goals.Kathryn Kleiman1983-84 Chairman of theAcademic Affairs Committee To the editor:In my experience, Rick Szesny, thecurrent SG Finance Committee chair¬man, has done a better job than theseveral chairpersons I have known. Hehas worked on the committee for anumber of years, and he has gained theexperience that the chairman musthave to make sure that the committeedistributes money correctly. Further, he takes time to understand the needsof student groups. Although I might notagree with every decision that thisyear’s committee has made. I mustnote that the current committee func¬tions better than others that I have en¬couraged. I think Rick Szesny shouldbe re-elected to the chairmanship ofthe SG Finance Committee.T. UhlLeave DEMON posters aloneTo the editor:In the course of the Student Govern¬ment campaign, it has come to my at¬tention that many of the posters of theDEMON party have been deliberatelyobscured by the advertisements of therival (CARE) party. Although theCARE party represents the views ofthe current SG leaders, nonetheless ourcandidates have the right to expresstheir views and to run in a free election.While we do not claim that the CARE candidates themselves participated inthese unethical campaign tactics wemust hold them responsible for the ac¬tion of their party. We therefore askthat the CARE party refrain from thesetactics and respect the right of thevoters to be informed of a viable alter¬native to the status quo.Charles H. HowellChairman, DEMON campaign com¬mitteeThe Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, April 10, 1984—5..v&»x*:\<<<<<<<<<<X:X:>X;X:XvXvXv;vX\<%%\\<vX\*x%\\\\\\\vX-XvXvXvX \ XvXX X;XvX •» X\ Vv.v.v Xv 8: & *•*A closer look at those history books reveals...To the editor:In his letter to the editor (April 6)Harry Douglas tells us it helps to readyour history books. His comment is inreference to the history of the modernMiddle-East, and more specifically,his letter is intended to comment onJesse Jackson’s relationship withYasser Arafat.First of all, I advise Mr. Douglas togo back and reread his history books.We are told that the area of the BritishMandate over Palestine was inhabitedby Palestinians and Jews who were im¬migrating there. Mr. Douglas has de¬cided to ignore the thousands of Jewswho had been living there for cen¬turies, in fact, since the destruction ofthe Second Temple (70 CE). Don’tthese people qualify as Palestinian?And how does Mr. Douglas intend to de¬fine Palestinian? Perhaps as a perma¬nent resident of Palestine?Mr. Douglas will discover in hisrereading that “Palestine” gained itsname under Byzantine rule (313 CE)and included parts of what is nowIsrael, Jordan, Lebanon, and Syria.Under the British Mandate of 1917, Pal¬estine included all of present day Israeland Jordan as well as a small portionof Lebanon. In 1918 the British tried toplay both sides by promising nation¬hood to both Jews and Moslems. In 1922the British gave over two thirds of theirmandate to the Hashemite family-Hus-sein. This gift left the remaining por¬tion of the mandate to be split betweenthe Jews and the Moslems in the re¬maining area. Meanwhile, the rest ofthe Arab world took on the form of themodern nation-state.In 1947, after various recommenda¬tions in 1937, 1938, and 1946, the UnitedNations proposed its partition plan toJewish and Moslem groups. The planwas accepted by the Jews, but like pre¬vious plans implying Jewish sover¬eignity, was rejected by the Arabs.Both the Moslem and Jewish states consisted of three land areas. The Jewsreceived, as their largest section, theuninhabitable Negev desert. The sec¬tions of both states were both ridicu¬lously indefensible, none the less theJews accepted the plan. The UN ap¬proved the plan, but Britain refused tocooperate with its implementation. OnMay 14, 1948, the mandate ended, theBritish walked out, the State of Israelwas declared, and the armies of Syria,Lebanon, Jordan, Egypt and Iraq in¬vaded. Yes, Mr. Douglas, the Jewswould have liked more, or at leastmore defensible land, yet they werewilling to compromise. The Arab coun¬tries were not. Moslems who fled theirhomes in the new State of Israel wereadvised, or even ordered to flee byMoslem leaders who saw the quick andtotal annihilation of the Jewish Stateclose at hand. In 1967, when Israel wasattacked and managed (by sheer sur¬prise) to take the now occupied terri¬tories, Arab leaders once again ad¬vised Moslem residents to flee.Aside from this, Mr. Douglas, Pales¬tinians are a difficult people to define ifyou consider that there are both Mos¬lems and Jews who live in villages aswell as those who are nomadic, such asthe Bedouins. Do Bedouins, who maywander from several countries, countas Palestinians? Do Jordanians? DoSouthern Syrians? Do MaronniteChristians?Additionally Mr. Douglas, you mightfind out in your books that Jews andMoslems are on friendly and coopera¬tive terms until, among other factors,Britain started making unfulfillablepromises to both interests.As to legal rights, occupants of theoccupied territories enjoy what noother occupied people enjoy, the gov¬erning of their territories under the lawof the defeated party (i.e. under Jor¬danian law). And why does no one evermention that before Israel occupiedthese territories that were to be part of the Moslem nation, that Jordan had oc¬cupied these exact same territories for20 years (1948-1967).Mr. Douglas should also know fromhis readings that the bombing of theKing David Hotel (which at the timewas the British command post in Jeru¬salem) had been announced but, as theBritish finally admitted, was not takenseriously at the time. The PLO hasnever announced its attacks before¬hand, they only take credit after the ca¬sualty count. And the numbers and vi-sciousness of the attacks cannot beginto be compared, neither can the choiceof victims. Children, women and civil¬ians are the repeated targets of thePLO, both in terms of who is attackedand who they chose to hide behind.The PLO has not waged a diplomaticcampaign to gain statehood since the1950’s. This has been a recent (the pastfive years) tactic of the PLO. If thePLO wants to negotiate for peace noone will stop them, Israel will comeand bargain at the table, but not so longas the PLO maintains and repeatedlyreiterates the article in its covenantthat calls for the complete and total an¬nihilation of the State of Israel byarmed aggression.Palestinians who are Israeli citizens (about 500,000 among a Jewish popula¬tion of 3,500,000) enjoy the highest stan¬dards of living and legal rights, thatare enforced, in the entire Arab world.All Palestinians, citizens of Israel andresidents of the occupied territories,enjoy free education that is both supe¬rior to the surrounding Arab countries,and also mandatory for all children, in¬cluding girls. That there is discrimina¬tion there can be little doubt, but askyourself why haven’t Israeli Moslemsleft for other countries? Because theiropportunities are so much greater inIsrael and because the Arab world doesnot want them. Hussein butchered10,000 Palestinians and PLO membersin 1971 in order to rid Jordan of them.Look at Lebanon today.There are many problems in the Mid¬dle-East today that need calm, ratio¬nal, and concerned help from all par¬ties. The PLO has its opportunity if itwill only accept the existence of theJewish state. Jesse Jackson’s problemis not whether or not he is perceived asan anti-Semite or anti—Israel, butrather, that Rev. Jackson, who is acharismatic leader and speaker, isquite frankly an inept politician.Serge LippeUniversity lacks trustTo the editor:This school is paranoid. A good ex¬ample of this occurred the other daywhen I went to Regenstein library tocheck out some recordings of stringquartets and found, much to my dis¬may, that you can’t check out records.What’s worse, I couldn’t even put it onthe turntable; I had to give my ID to aguy working there and then tramp tothe other side of the third floor to aroom where you listen to headphoneswith the same quality as those you geton an airplane. If I wanted td listen to acertain part, I had to get up and call the guy. This wasn’t working too well be¬cause I was following a score, and if Ilost it there was nothing I could do. Iwent there the next day to talk to themusic librarian, and he answered witha flat ‘no’ without even considering mysituation.By the end of this bad experience, Iwas quite angry, but not surprised. Itwas just another example of excessiveparanoia and lack of trust by thisschool.Peter HuszaghFirst-year studentSTUDENT GOVERNMENT ELECTIONSWEDNESDAY & THURSDAY • APRIL 11 & 12Elections for Executive Officers, Assembly Representatives andConstitutional AmendmentsPOLLING PLACES:Wednesday, April 11 Thursday, April 12Cobb HallReynolds ClubBusiness SchoolLaw SchoolInternational House 9:30-3:3011:30-1:3011:30-1:0011:00-1:0011:00-1:00 Cobb HallMedical SchoolBusiness SchoolReynolds Club 9:30-12:0011:00-1:0011:30-1:301:00-2:00Burton-Judson Dining Hall 5:00-7:00. Pierce Dining Hall 5:00-7:00Woodward Dining Hall 5:00-7:00Shoreland 6:00-8:00Broadview 6:30-8:30Last polling place on Thursday officially doses In Reynolds Club at 2:00 p.m.For election results, please call Student Government Office at 962*9732Thursday night6—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, April 10, 1984THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOJOHN M. OLIN CENTERpresentsMICHAEL WALZERProfessor of Social Science, Institutefor Advanced StudiesLIBERALISM AND THEART OF SEPARATIONThursday, April 12,19844:00 p.m.Breasted Lecture HallOriental Institute1155 E. 58th St.With tax time coming up, weigh yourdeductions on a Pelouze scale. Whenfilling out those forms use a finepoint you can get from one ofour Panasonic or Huntelectric pencil sharpeners.When it’s allcomplete, carryhome your refundin one of our fineStebco Attachecases.The University of Chicago BookstoreStationery Department2nd floor • 970 E. 58th St.VISA' 962-8729 or I.B.X. 5-4103 WE SERVEMORRY’S CUSTOM,HAAGEN DAZS& SCHOEP’SICECREAMSCHOICESIN ALL!CONESSUNDAESMALTSSHAKESSODASHAND PACKEDPINTS & QUARTSNEW!SHERBETFREEZESORANGE, RASPBERRY, PINEAPPLE$2ioMAED WITH4 SCOOPSSPECIALTY SHAKESOREO COOKIE/MARSHMALLOWSTRAWBERRY/BANANABANANA/CHOCOLATEGREATIDEA!MORRY’SQ SHOPIN THEl* \ r MON-FRI7 AM - MIDNITESAT 9 AM-10 PM' SUN 11 AM-MIDNITE-v* f.The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, April 10, 1984—7.V.•V, 8 >x* 8 >:•»»:■V*. ;>XvX;X; ‘.Viiiii •••••••£ 8: •X; :X‘ Xv, XmAmendmentscontinued from page onefunds are likely to be available for theactivity from non-Student Fundsources;” and “and any other factorsthe Finance Committee deems appro¬priate.”Some feared a few activities wouldbe excluded by the guidelines, as someactivities may not involve many stu¬ dents, and thus have a high cost perstudent, but may still be important.Hillery and others supporting hisamendment stressed, however, thatthe proposed guidelines would not allbe binding.The amendment restricts SGFCfrom financing activities whose “pri¬mary effect” is to solicit support forany candidate for office within or with¬out the University, solicit support to in¬fluence public legislation or adminis-Table talk ’84 kickoff successfulBy John KotzThe opening day of Tabletalk ’84 wasa success, according to Tim Wong,vice-president of Student Govern¬ment.“The turnout was good for the firstday, but I hope to see even more peopleparticipating as the week goes on. Boththe students and the faculty were excit¬ed about the program and particularlyliked the idea of being able to get to¬gether in a more informal setting,”Wong said Monday during the lunch¬time eventAmong those attending yesterday’skick-off, which began at 11:30 a.m. inthe North Lounge of Reynold’s Club,were Don Levine, dean of the College,Richard Taub, assistant dean of theCollege, Herman Sinaiko, dean of stu¬dents in the College, along with anumber of students, who were able totake advantage of the 10 percent dis¬count offered by Morry’s for theevent.The Tabletalk program was formedto increase and enhance student-facul¬ty social relationships in a more infor¬mal setting than the classroom pro¬vides, such as over breakfast, lunch ordinner. To encourage these gatherings,Hyde Park eateries are offering 10-20percent discount to student-facultygroups who present discount couponsbefore paying for their meals. Coupons are available at the StudentActivities Office (Ida Noyes 210), Deanof Students Office (Administration219), Advisor’s Desk (Harper 280) andthe Reynold’s Club Box Office. For anupdated list of participating restau¬rants and other information, call theStudent Government Office at962-9732.Tabletalk ’84 will continue throughApril 22.Murat Williams talkMurat Williams, ambassador to ElSalvador during the Kennedy adminis¬tration, will speak Wednesday at 7:30p.m. in the homeroom of InternationalHouse. The talk, sponsored by theCenter for Latin American Studies, willfocus on the continuity of relations be¬tween the United States and El Salva¬dor.Under American Guns“Lebanon under American Guns:Reagan’s Political Disaster” will bethe topic of a forum April 15 at 3:30p.m. in Ida Noyes. Sponsored by theChicago Area Women for Peace, the Uof C Women’s Union, and the UC Centerfor Middle-Eastern Studies, the forumwill feature Frank Collins, who recent¬ly returned from the Middle East. Col¬lins interviewed many leaders and or¬dinary people on a fact-findingmission.This SummerAt Cornell University you can enjoy aremarkable variety of courses andlearning opportunities In a setting ofbeautiful lakes, parks, ravines, andwaterfalls, you can fulfill requirements,accelerate your degree program, orsimply take the courses that you’vealways put off. Ithaca, a smallcosmopolitan city, is located in amagnificent, varied countryside thatoffers you water sports and ball games,climbing and camping, theater andoutdoor concerts, soaring and biking,birding and hiking... Call or write to seefor yourself why Cornell is the place youshould be this summer.Cornell University Summer SessionB12 Ives Hall—Box 15Ithaca. New York 14553607/256-4987YOUR ON-CAMPUSPHOTOHEADQUARTERSSales-Repair-Supplies• Rentals by day - week - month:Cameras, projectors, screens, recorders(w/valid U. of C. I.D. only)• Prompt quality photo processing byKodak and other discount processorsAuthorized dealer sales for Canon • Kodak • Nikon • Olympus• Pentax • Polaroid • Panasonic • Sony • Vivitar and others.- Batteries - Film- Darkroom accessories - Video tapes- Cassette tapes - Chemicals- RadiosThe University of Chicago BookstorePhotographic & Office Machine Department970 E. 58th St. 2nd Floor962-7558I.B.X. 5-4364 trative policy, or advocate activeviolation of local, state, or federallaws. Currently, the constitution re¬stricts funding from groups whose“significant” intent is to engage insuch activities.Hillery said the changes would en¬able an activity which has part of its ef¬fect to influence public policy, for ex¬ample, but whose primary effect is notthat goal, could now gain funding.“Anything less than the primary effectwould be fuflded,” he said.“Currently, we look at the intent ofan organization,” Hillery said. “But itis much easier to determine its effectthan to try to see what an organizationthinks.”While the amendment would still puta limit on funding certain political ac¬tivities, it would be more flexible thanthe present constitutional political pro¬scription. Hillery thinks the change“would open up funding a lot.”A controversy arose over the fundingof religious groups, and the differentmeans by which they would be treatedunder the guidelines.“Why open up funding to politicalgroups if you do not give this freedomto religious groups?” SGFC chair RickSzesny asked. Opposition to Szesny’sargument noted the “personal” natureof religious activity, which would notappeal to a broad range of students.“A political activity can be as per¬sonal as religion,” Szesny said in call¬ing for equal consideration for funding.“To claim that politics is not personalis fallacious. A political organizationhas a belief just as a religious organi4zation has a religion.”Some argued political groups have Twider appeal, but Szesny claimed thiswas due to their “persistence.”Hill argued against Szesny’s objec¬tions, claiming an activity’s religiouscontent could easily be determined,whereas its political content couldnot.Szesny, though, said the amendment“may come to haunt” SG.Hillery, though, believes the amend¬ment will pass if students “understoodit.” “If they understand it, I think thatmost people will vote for it simply be¬cause it liberalizes the activities thatare likely to be funded, particularly inthe political area,” Hillery said.The Assembly also considered fiveother amendments at the meeting.Steve Levitan proposed two concern¬ing the Student/Faculty Administra¬tion Court. One, passed by acclama¬tion, prevents any Executive Council ofAssembly members from holdingCourt positions. Currently, ExecutiveCouncil members are allowed to set onthe court.Another amendment, which failed,stated, “Non-student members of theCourt will set for three years, not to ex¬ceed a total of two consecutiveterms.”Michael Aronson proposed threeamendments.The first of these would consider allentering students in the University, notmerely freshmen in the College, as asingle unit entitled to five representa¬tives. The amendment was tabled forfuture consideration.A second amendment, passed by theAssembly, would give each dormitorywith fewer than 150 residents a repre¬sentative. Currently, these dorms aregrouped together as a single electoralunit with two representatives.Another amendment also passed bythe Assembly sets the number of Asse¬mbly representatives at 50 and thenumber of executive officers at 5. Theamendment also sets the date of SGspring elections between the third andfifth weeks of the quarter.Each amendment passed by the As¬sembly must now be approved by thestudents.In other matters, the Assembly over¬turned a SGFC decision denying a loanof $58 to GALA for a button sellingcampaign. Szesny spoke against hiscommittee’s decision for GALA.“I don’t think we should look at it asa political organization,” Szesny said.“It is a social and psychological group.They are people like the rest of us.”The Assembly will meet again April19.KO&CANDINNERd I-House 1414 l. sn* st.SPECIAL ORIENTAL CUISINE INCLUDES:* Kori Kuk (oxtail soup)♦ Korean Sacwu Tun(shrimp fried in fry} batter)♦ fbulgogi ( korean bahmicd beet)4 Chop Chae (korean noodles ivegetables)* barn bap (hce with chestnuts) 1# Kim Chee ( pickled cabbage)WED. APRIL 114*SO " 7- 00 P.w.complimentary, beveragest Musical entertainment8—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, April 10, 1984Just in TimeLor Cradualion.The IBM IVrsonulT\ pewrilor i* SUM) les>midi April 28. 1984.lisa lot of t\|)owritereven al 1 lie $095regular price. Il lias the same qualit\ andreliability that's made IBM hpewriters diemost preferred typewriters. Il lias a correc¬tion key that lifts off mistakes, just like theIBM Selectric® III typewriter. Now if that's notenough to get you to earn one awav. this lowerprice should do it. $595.WE VE BEEN KNOWN A WHILE FOROUR FULL SERVICE. VERSATILEXEROX0 COPIESAnd now we re becoming known for ourInstantCassetteTape ~Copying ServiceCOPIES AREOUR BAGCOPYWORKS LtdTHE COPY CENTER IN HARPER COURT28? 2233TheChicagoMaroonSfdwT New^xpei- of theUuhrentty of ChicagoSo much morefor so much less,Chicago 33 North Dearborn St. (312)899-0010Chicago 160 East Erie (312) 245-7800Oak Brook Oakbrook Center (next to Sak>) (312) 655-3300Sehaumburg 1253 E. Golf Rd. (312)885-8510STANLEY H. KAPLAN 2SEDUCATIONAL CENTERApril ClassesGMAT...GRE..? AT...ACT-4WK/MCAT SPEED READING. .'May Classes4WK/GMAT SPEED READINGPREPARE FORMCAT * SAT * LSAT * GMAT • GREGRE PSYCH * GRE BIO * OCAT * VAT * MATINTRODUCTION TO LAW SCHOOL*SPEED READINGSSAT*PSAT*DAT* ACHIEVEMENTS* ACT*CPATOEFL * MSKP * NMB 1 11 111 * ECFMG * FLEXN CLEX*CGFNS*FMGEMS*NPB 1 *ESL*NCB lSPRMG. SUMMER FALL WTENStVESCourses constantly updatad MamDieprograms and hours Visa any cent#! andsee tor yourself why we meke 'hedifference Speed Reading Coursefeatures Free Demo lesson—Can to'days A limesRrapwMO” Spn**ft» inot '9MARUNGTON HEIGHTSCHICAGO CENTERHIGHLAND PARKLA GRANGE CENTEROuMt N V SUM Only Can To* F'** BOG 223 1 7»2G*r*ert H M*p> u S Ceet Pu*no fVx Tomnto Cenea*312 437-6650312 764-5151312 433-7410312 352-5840“WHAT IS THE BEEF?”The best, eligible,excellent, finest:(Please vote)ARTHUR CHANfor Finmnce Committee ChairPerrin H. Lowrey Awardfor students in the Collegecash prizefor an original poem, essay,or short storySubmit a typewritten manuscript under apseudonym (name and address in a separateevelope).by April 20th to:11023 Pierce, 5514 S. University Whatnow?How about apotentially rewardingsales career with us?We're NorthwesternMutual Life, The QuietCompany. Talk to us, andyou'll be talking to acompany with tnehighest percentage ofcollege graduates in theindustry. And the lowestpercentage of turnover.And only NorthwesternMutual agents canhandle Northwesternproducts.For a career that offersconstant challengesalong with anopportunity for unlimitedcompensation, call us.We think our toughstandards willmatch yours.Jane C. DennettFellinger Corporation150 S. Lacker Dr., 800Chicago, IL 60606(312) 781-2732NorthwesternMutual LifeThe Quiet CompanyA tough act to followt The Northwestern Mutual life InsuranteCompany, Milwaukee, Wisconsin 1RMAn equal opportunity employerThe Stationsof the CrossOrgan Meditationsby Marcel DuprePoems byPaul ClaudelOrganist: Thomas if putflogReader: Leo KrugSUNDAY,APRIL 15 at 3:00 pmChurch of St. Thomasthe Apostle55th & Kimbark. March<§>n.ofDimesSAVES BABIESHELP FIGHT BIRTH DEFECTSThe Chicago Maroon—Tuesday. April 10, 1984—9i(ibnTEST IMG CENTERS OUR GUARANTEE:II your Score is not mthe top 25%, the nextcourse is tree.COLUMBIA UNIVERSITYSURVEY RANKS BAR/BRIOVERKAPLANClaaaaa Starting In AprilFor Juna Exam$100.00 Early Sign Up DiacountTakaHoma Caaaatta Tapaa call LOOPWHEATONPALATINEEVANSTONLA GRANGE855-1088 I MAKE MONEYI IN COLLEGEEarn $185 to $475+ weekly, working with MCLand Associates. We have a lot ot part-time andfull-time positions available in your area. Weare a small, yet rapidly expanding marketingresearch firm based in the New YorkMetropolitan area. For complete details andan application, please send a stamped, self-addressed envelope to MCL and Associates.Post Office Box 579. Ithaca, New York 14851.Win a honeymoonalmost anywherein the world!Register now through April 30,1984at participating Zales for our fabulousHoneymoon Sweepstakes. The GrandPrize is a week’s honeymoon at anyHyatt Hotel in the world, includingmeals and airfare, no purchase neces¬sary! Plus lots of other great prizes!And Zales also has special values ondiamond solitaires and bridal sets.You have a lot to gain — and thewhole world to win — by coming into Zales right now!a. Brilliant-cut diamond 14 karatgold solitaire. $99b. Diamond bridal set with 7diamonds in 14 karat gold. $900c. Diamond trio set. Engagement ringwith matching his and her 10 karatgold wedding bands. $399d. Diamond bridal set with 2 rubies,3 diamonds in 14 karat gold. $599e. Diamond bridal set with gracefulinterlocking design in 14 karatgold. $349MAJOR CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED: Zales Credit Card • MasterCard • VISA • American Express • Carte Blanche • Diners Club • Illustrations enlarged.Sale prices effective on selected merchandise. Entire stock not included. Original prices shown on every item. All items subject to prior sale.Items illustrated not necessarily those on sale. Zales Honeymoon Sweepstakes is void where prohibited. You must be 18 or older to enter.10—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, April 10, 1984NEWS illlll wmwmmCandidatescontinued from page oneFINANCE COMMITTEE CHAIRRick Szesny is a Public Policy gradu¬ate student on the CARE slate. He hasserved on SG for four years. He hasbeen on the Finance Committee forthose four years and was its chairmanthis year. He has been active in the U ofC Debating Society. This fall, as chair,he sponsored an informational meetingon how student groups can get fund¬ing.Szesny said that, “Student groupshave been dumped on for too long,”and sees his role as “fighting for thestudents.” He estimated that he spends20 to 25 hours a week preparing for andattending meetings with SGFC, stu¬dent groups and the administration.Szesny emphasized encouraging grad¬uate student groups to be more activeand apply for funding as a focus forSGFC, if he is reelected. He observed,however, that more undergraduategroups are working with graduates andthat, “it (the University) is more of acommunity than it used to be.”Guy Yasko is a DEMON candidateand a second-year student. He has beeninvolved with athletics at the U of C.Yasko sees role of SGFC Committeechair as “getting the money out.” Hebelieves that while MAB should notcome under the direct governance ofSGFC, steps should be taken to holdthem accountable, possibly through anew SG committee.He said that if elected finance chairhe would play “less of a guiding role”in SGFC that Rick Szesny currentlydoes in Finance Committee decisions.Concerning graduate groups receivingmore SG funding or attention, he saidthat SGFC “has to let them knowthere’s money.” Yasko criticizedSzesny for not doing this and citedWHPK as an example of funding beingunfairly denied.Julius Santise is a third-year studentand an independent candidate for fi¬nance chair. He noted that he has hadcontact with SG both as a spectator atAssembly meetings and in presentingbudgets for student groups. He workedon the now-defunct Chicago Lampoonand is active in Model UN, and is on theDean’s Advisory Committee on SocialSciences. He is Features Editor for the Spectator.“I think SG should be more respons¬ible and responsive to the students,”Santise said. He proposes, if elected Fi¬nance Committee chair, to help groupsfind funding alternatives to SGFCmoney. He mentioned street fairs asbeing one funding possibility. He saidthat MAB should be “subject to theusual checks and balances,” that othergroups are. Santise criticized Szesnysaying, “I don’t think his job has beenthat outstanding — I don’t think he’sdone enough.”Arthur Chan is an independent can¬didate and a graduate student in PublicPolicy. He was active with the Chinesestudents association at the Universityof Wisconsin at Madison where he wasan undergraduate. He has not been in¬volved in any activities since coming tothe U of C.“Responsibility to student groups” isthe main role of the SGFC chair, ac¬cording to Chan. He does not advocateany significant changes in StudentGovernment or the Finance Commit¬tee. He refused to criticize Szesny’s jobas current finance chair.SECRETARYSunnie Quijada is Freshman Repre¬sentative to SG and is running on theCARE slate. A first-year student, Qui¬jada is on the Ex-Libris, Activities, andStudent Services committees. She hasbeen a Western representative for aCBS children’s news show for the pasteight years.Quijada sees the role of SG secretaryas “representing SG to the students.”While she sees the job as primarily or¬ganizational, Quijada also sees it asimage forming. She commented, “Thepopulace has had a bad opinion of SG.”If elected, Quijada said that she hopesto change this perception problemthrough Project Outreach.Newton Hall, is a third-year studentand a last minute addition to theDEMON party. He is in charge of PRfor Student Hotline; is a member ofIHC, OBS; and was an O-Aide.He was told to run for a seat on SGthis spring by some OBS members sohe could “do some wheeling and deal¬ing on the Finance Committee.” He didnot participate in SG Assembly afterdiscovering that he was ineligible toserve on SGFC because he felt ineffec¬tive as a representative. Hall promised to “let people knowwhat’s going on,” in SG if he is elected.He said that the present secretary,Chris Hill, reports Student Govern¬ment news more to the Assembly thanto the general student population.TREASURERChris Gomez is a third year studentin the College running on the CAREslate. She is the incumbent SG treasur¬er and serves on the SGFC. She runsthe SG booklist and has worked on theSG Book Exchange. She is active inConcrete Gothic Theater and is an assi-tant resident head for Vincent House in Chris sees her job as primarily,“keeping the books in order,” andworking with the Finance Committeeto oversee budgets that are submittedwith SG. She noted that it is advanta¬geous for the treasurer to live near Chi¬cago to continue bookkeeping duringthe summer and help fund studentgroups that continue in the summersession.Mary Jo Pittner, a third-year studentin the College who is running on theDEMON slate, could not be reached forcomment.Others contributed to gather infor¬mation for this story.>-;v , •; •Administrate CourtriHrar HAVA CimAim .. .... ' *... ■' • > '" ' •* x*Geoffrey KA. Dunaway ■Kathryn Kleiman (CARE)Rita WalterDerek Jeffreys (CARE)Michael Fitzgerald (CARE)Steve Levitan (CARE)Scott Durchslag (CARE)Amy MossHltcbcock-Snell Reps.Joe BarcoskyPierce Reps.Bob Nesselroth (CARE)John M. PonterottoPhilip Siegal (CARE)Allison nafukuWoodward Reps.Liz Roach (CARE)Larisa GoldinBruce Posner (CARE)Breckinridge-Blackstone-Greenwood Reps.Michael Aronson (CARE)Bill FloridaStarley Shade (CARE)Shoreland Reps.David “Berny” Berniker (CARE)Nathan Schoppa (CARE)James Tsugawa (CARE) Michael T.' Novak4m. farfmZmzMA: ■ mm\ <6Abraham Bell (CARE) m3Urban LarsonLisa Montgomery (CARE)Sandy Spidel (CARE)John Bello (DEMON)Derek Buzasi (CARE)SchoolBotscharowBiology Reps.William McDade (CARE)Daniel D. EadsDerek Sotmenberg (CARE)Law SchoolBetsy WhiteheadLarry F. EisenstatMedical SchoolDavid Scott (CARE)Liz Bernstein (CARE;Physical ScienceGeorge Boyajian (CARE)Social ScienceSeth SandersProject ’84continued from page oneThe task force has also examined thepossibility of studios for students notinvolved in courses. Finding a place topaint or sculpt, for instance, when nottaking a course, poses problems, butGossett said the condition “has im¬proved over the course of the last twoyears.”Concerning the curricular problems,the task force tried to address “whatseem to us rather chaotic, diverse re¬quirements in...the college divisions.”Gossett felt “certain that the task forcewill suggest there should be a unifiedrequirement for creative arts ratherthan separate ones by each division.”The problem, though, lies in the struc¬ture of such a requirement, which must“interact with so many other parts” ofthe curriculum, according to Gossett.The committee, however, discussedways to organize the creative arts re¬quirement, and plans to develop aseries of models for use by futuregroups responsible for the actual re¬shaping of the requirement.The task force holds it meeting to¬morrow at 3 p.m. in Gates-Blake 428,and Gossett, as do all of the otherchairmen, hopes more students will ap¬pear. “One does have the sense,” hepointed out, though, “that studentshave some doubts about the extentthey’d want to participate in theissues.” Four students expressed inter¬est in the task force during the courseof its meetings, but Gossett felt thatpart of the reason for the lack of contin¬ued support stems from the students’desire to express specific things thatconcerned them. “Having stated(them), they (the students) don’t seemto want to be involved in what is (a) dif¬ficult task,” said Gossett.Speaking of the difficulty of the taskof preparing a report, Gossett reacted to Bernard Cohn’s comments in Fri¬day’s Maroon, when Cohn called Proj¬ect 1984 “a fraud” because it failed toaddress the “real issues” such as howcurricular changes will occur.“(It is) an absolutely crucial firststep toward curricular reform,” saidGossett. “As I’ve understood, the in¬tent all along has been to use this yearas a year that talking will go on...toproduce reports that will go on...to pro¬duce reports that will be studied atlarge. On the basis (of the reports) spe¬cific changes will be effected.”Gossett continued, feeling that thelack of action does not present prob¬lems. “We all took this job on knowingwe were being asked to think, to talkabout options. The task of transferringthese words into action is the nextstep...a project beyond 1984.”The Creative Arts task force con¬tains faculty members from several di¬visions, and described the job of find¬ing time to bring together 7-10 peoplefrom 7-10 disciplines as “daunting” butapparently worth the effort, sincethese “are issues that haven’t been dis¬cussed in 20 years.”Foreign LanguagesThe task force on Foreign languageshas met once a week since its incep¬tion, to address primarily issues in¬volving inequities in the foreign lan¬guage requirements of each division inthe College.Tetsuo Najita, chairman of the taskforce, said that the foreign languageprogram “is in a confused state,” andthe task force has tried to determine“what the language program isabout,” and how much foreign lan¬guage study a student should havewhile completing a BA. He added thatthe task force has produced no formalrecommendations, but in the course ofthe year has examined whether theCollege should have a foreign languagerequirement, how that requirementshould differ from division to divisionand whether degree of difficulty — ro¬ mance languages versus exotic lan¬guages such as Chinese or Arabic —should affect the amount of credittoward meting the requirement.Najita said the task force “was notsure as to how any of our committee’sdiscussions will lead to some kind ofpolitical discussions.“We’re studying very complexissues,” said Najita, who sees the jobas “a clarification task,” rather thanthe task of taking action right away.“How far it goes remains to beseen,” he said, adding that his commit¬tee had not discussed it because “it isenough to talk about the confused stat¬ed (of foreign language studies).”No students have appeared at themeetings, but Najita said that “therehas been considerable undergraduateinterest (in far eastern languages, oneof Najita’s fields) and considerable dif¬ficulty in nursing along a program“due to the time and energy required,and scheduling conflicts.“There is no way these languageswill diminish in importance,” headded, saying “we have to talk aboutit” in an effort to find a way to inte¬grate the program into the curriculum.“There has tween a mounting concernabout the place of these languages inthe world and in education, more sothan when I first came,” said Najita,who has taught here for 15 years.The Foreign Language Studies taskforce holds its open meeting April 20.Course ElectivesWendy Olmsted described her taskforce’s topic as “open ended. ..verybroad,” and said that the memberswanted to look “to see whether thepractice (of choosing electives) reallyharmonizes with the rationale for hav¬ing them.” Olmsted encouraged stu¬dents to come to the task force’s openmeeting, slated for April 19, so thecommittee “can see if the studentshave encountered problems in makingchoices ”Since the discussion of course elec-The tives demands a vast amount of stu¬dent input, the task force distributed aquestionnaire to a small random samp¬le of students. Olmsted said that thetask force has not received as many re¬turns as they had hoped, and they don’thave enough to draw any conclusionsabout how students use their elec¬tives.“We want to see if students have tro¬uble making choices,” said Olmsted.“We can’t tell by looking at the(course) program, because the ad¬visers and students are the ones whoknow.”Olmsted said the task force presently“is making the transition from identi¬fying problems to a point where we canfigure what recommendations will beuseful.” One of the major problemsOlmsted cited with the electives pro¬gram involves their potential use forfulfilling requirements. She used theexample of students who must takeprecalculus math; they have to useelectives frequently to meet the re¬quirement, meaning the student had nochoice. “We need that kind of flexibili¬ty (to allow fulfillment of special re¬quirements),” said Olmsted, “but withtoo much of that the notion of electivesbecomes puzzling.”The task force has had four studentsparticipating throughout the year,though the same students don’t alwaysattend each time. Olmsted realized theproblems of student participation dueto the time commitment, “but asthings loosened up,” she said, “the stu¬dents have become more active.”Olmsted saw the project itself as ameans of “communicating the com¬plex curriculum structure to the com¬munity at large.”Nathan Tarcov and Jonathan Z.Smith, the chairman of the task forceson the senior year and the freshmanyear, could not be reached for com¬ment on the progress of their particu¬lar discussions.Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, April 10, 1984—11CAMPUS FILMS wasmsmTwo Seconds (Mervyn LeRoy, 1932)Tues., April 10 at 7:15 p.m. DOC. $2.Fists in the Pockets (Marco Belloc-chio, 1966) Wed., April 11 at 8 p.m.DOC. $2.Our Man in Havana (Carol Reed, 1960)The British Secret Service recruits aBritish vacuum cleaner salesman toact as ‘our man in Havana.’ He takesthe money offered to him only to get hisonly child the best that money can buy(quite a lot in pre-revolution Havan-na!!) and assumes that espionage is agigantic, if slightly bizarre, practicaljoke. His superiors receive drawings ofweapon installations in the mountainsof Cuba that look suspiciously like fu¬turistic vacuum cleaners, whichprompts them to send him two assis¬tant spies. His job becomes morealarming when someone starts killinginnocent strangers who have the samenames as his fictitious contacts. Al¬though one of the many villains on TheOther Side remarks that “a gun is amore effective weapon than a vacuum cleaner,” Our Man in Havana provesthat you can be ‘‘the best agent in thfWestern Hemisphere” and fire a gunonly once. Wed., April 11 at 8:30 p.m.LSF. -AMDRome, Open City (Roberto Rossellini,1946) tells the story of an Italian Resis¬tance leader who is haunted by theGestapo. A friend’s fiancee gives himshelter, but when she is shot, the Resis¬tance leader takes refuge with his mis¬tress, who betrays him to the Gestapo.“(This film’s) intensity and immedia¬cy derives principally from its depic¬tion of war in terms of human valuesand relationships, from its subtle blendof documentary and fiction, and fromthe anger which informs it and stillgives it power today.” — Liz-AnneBawden, The Oxford Companion ToFilm. Thurs.. April 12 at 7:30 and 9:30p.m. International House. $2. — BTThe Rainmaker (Joseph Anthony,1956) Thurs., April 12 at 8 p.m. DOC.$2.iiiiiiiiigi ■wmmmfflfflmmmmmmTUESDAYCommittee on Arms Control & Disarmament: Meet¬ing, 7pm, Ida Noyes Lounge.Calvert House: Investigation into Catholicism 7pmCenter for Far Eastern Studies: Ching ImperialRites: A Dialogue. 3:30pm. JRL 522.Hillel: Midrash Class. 8pm. Israeli Dance at IdaNoyes, 8pm.Philosophy Dept: Harty Field's Philosophy ofMathematics. 4pm. HM Library.Center for Middle Eastern Studies: Earth People.Ataturk and the Find Arts. 4pm. That Woman, 7pm.Breasted Hall.American Meteorological Society: Glaciological andOceanographic Field Work on the Artarctic Ice Cap,7:30pm. 5734 S. Ellis. Rm 101.WEDNESDAYHillel: critical Study of the Hebrew Bible. 7:30pm.Biochemistry Dept: Topogenesis of Membrane Cy-tockeleton Domains in Differentiation: Spectrin as aModel System. 4pm, CLSC 101. Women's Union Meeting, 6:30, Ida Noyes.English and Scottish Country Dance, 8pm, IdaNoyes.Bridge Club, 7pm, Ida Noyes.Pathfinders Toastmasters Club, 7:30pm, CobbHall.Pro-Life Association, 7:30pm, Ida Noyes 3rd fl.Rockefeller Chapel: Service of Holy CommunionFollowed by Breakfasts, 8pm. Carillon recital andtower tours, 12:00. Lenten discussion. 6pm.THURSDAYCenter for the Study of Industrial Societies: The Ga¬tekeepers of an Ivory Tower: The Process of Deci¬sion-making in Avant-Garde Art, 12 noon, WilderHouse.CAUSE, 7:30pm, Ida Noyes.Music Dept: Noontime Concert: Bat Auartet,12:15pm, Goodspeed Recital hall. Free.Hillel: Advanced Talmud Class, 5:30pm.Center for Far Eastern Studies: Merchandise asCulture: A Semiotic Approach to Japenese Depart¬ment Stores, 3:30pm, JRL 522.Introducing Morry’sCOMPLETE BREAKFAST SPECIAL!ONE EGGGRILLED BAGELHASH BROWNSBUTTERJELLYCOFFEE OR TEATHE BEST BUYIN TOWN FORONLY... 99*MORRY’S in HutchinsonCommonsHILLEL SEDER WORKSHOPThursday, April 12,8:00 -10:00 p.m.A complete workshop, covering thehistory and traditions of Passover, thestructure and content of the Haggadah,and the actual making of a Seder - thetable setting, rituals, and food.HILLEL HOUSE • 5715 5. WOODLAWN AVE.12—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, April 10,1984 Softball splits openersThe University of Chicago split adoubleheader against Beloit Friday toopen the 1984 schedule. The Maroonstook the opener, 2-0, with a seventh in¬ning rally, but the Buccaneers erased athree-run Maroon lead in taking thesecond game.“It says a lot (for the team),” saidMaroon head coach Cheryl Kennedy,who added overall she “was glad to beable to hold them (Beloit) defensive¬ly.”Sophomore Helen Gemmill drove inKaren Kitchen and Madelyn Detloffwith a single in the seventh inning togive Chicago a victory in the firstgame. Kitchen, a Maroon senior co¬captain, retired the Buccaneers inorder in the bottom of the inning to pre¬serve her five-hit shutout. She fannedthree and walked three.With one out in the seventh, fresh¬man Arzou Ahsan singled, but she gotcaught stealing. Kitchen and Detloffthen singled to set up Gimmill’s gamewinner.In the nightcap Chicago broke a 1-1 tie in the seventh on a three-run homerby Karen Walsh, who had entered thegame in the fifth inning. Walsh’s oneout blast followed a walk to Lynn Birc-sak and a single by Dana Howd. Eachrunner had moved up on an error.Beloit pulled out the victory in thebottom of the seventh aganst Kitchenon two-run singles by Wearmouth andBunson. The singles came with oneout.The Maroons faced Wheaton yester¬day at North Field, and travels to LakeForest for a doubleheader this after¬noon. The Foresters split a twinbillwith pre-season conference favorite St.Norbert over the weekend, “so thatshould make things pretty interestingin the conference,” said Kennedy.“I didn’t want to open against a con¬ference opponent,” she added. The Be¬loit games had originally followed agame against NIU on the schedule, butthe NIU game was rescheduled for Sat¬urday, the day after the encounter withconference foe Beloit. Saturday’sgame was cancelled as well.Tennis sweeps tri-meetAfter crushing Lawrence, 7-2, theUniversity of Chicago men’s tennisteam came back to sweep Cornell, 9-0,to win Saturday’s tri-meet at Inglesidecourts. The Maroons, 3-1 on the season,lost just one set against the Rams allafternoon.Freshman Jay Woldenberg contin¬ued his undefeated string at his firstsingles, defeating Cornell’s GeorgeDrive 6-2, 6-1 and Lawrence’s PeteMontross 6-1, 6-2. Saturday alsomarked the return of junior PhilMowery to the lineup. Mowery teamedwith Woldenberg at first doubles, andthe team coasted 6-1, 6-0 over Cornelland 6-4, 7-6 against the Vikings.Mike Vail, Pete Kang, and HenryLujan all won their singles matcheswith Cornell, though Kang and Lujaneach had sets go to tiebreakers. Clif¬ ford Ko won fifth singles, and RichChin took the sixth singles spot.At second doubles, Vail and Kangunited to defeat Krive and Cam Car¬ney, 4-6, 6-1, 6-2. Ko and Lujan had aneasier time at third doubles, winning6-1, 6-2.The doubles teams swept Lawrence,with Ko and Lujan rallying after losingthe first set, 6-3, to Paul Fraser andRick Sasenice. Sasenice nipped Chin atsixth singles, 6-7, 7-6, 7-6, for one ofLawrence’s wins, while Scott Ducandowned Kang, 6-2, 6-1, for the othertriumph. All of the remaining Chicagosingles players posted relatively easyvictories.The team returns to action Saturdayagainst Beloit and Lake Forest in an¬other tri-meet, this one at Beloit.GAMES DAY!Place: Ida Noyes HallDate: Saturday, April 14Time: 9:00 a.m.-Midnight Ga,i\<&'ties ofth.e4fir>d!All interested are hereby invited to attend theGames Day. Come for an hour or spend the wholeday! Relax, enjoy yourself. You deserve a day of funand rest. We have people playing Trivial Pursuit,Risk, Runequest, Dungeons and Dragons, Traveller,Scrabble, Uno, Champions, Monopoly, Anti-Monopoly,Diplomacy, Clue, Cosmic Encounters, C U, Back¬gammon, Kensington, Rolemaster, and a number ofother games. If you own a game that you’d like toplay, please feel free to bring it along.Game Masters that wish to reserve a playing areashould contact Edward Dunphy at 753-2233 beforeThursday, April 12.Organized by the Fantasy Games Club • Funded by SGFCRugby drops heartbreaker to NIU, then whips NUBy Mike TroySaturday the U of C rugby teamopened its season by splitting a dualmeet. The Maroons suffered a heart¬breaking loss to Northern Illinois Uni¬versity, 10-7, then stormed back tocrush Northwestern, 6-3.The U of C second side also lost ahard fought battle to Northwestern’ssecond side, while a scrappy U of Cthird side tied the Wildcats’ third side.The first game pitted Chicagoagainst NIU in their traditional springrivalry. The Maroons came out storm¬ing in the first half, and led 7-0 at half¬ time thanks to a penalty kick by PatWaresk and a try by Steve Hutt. In thesecond half, with the wind in theirfaces, the Maroons played very flatball and couldn’t get anything going of¬fensively. NIU, after opening the halfwith two quick penalty kicks, continuedto play aggressively throughout thehalf. Then, as time actually ran out,NIU scored a try to give the Corndogsthe game, 10-7. It was a crushing defeatfor the Maroons, but instead of deflat¬ing the team, it made them hungrierthan ever. Northwestern was next, andnobody on the Maroon team was goingBoilermakers beat lacrosse, 5-2By Tim GoodellThe U of C Lacrosse Club lost its firstgame of the season in Northwestern’sDyche Stadium last Sunday as Purduecame from a 2-1 halftime deficit to win,5-2. The game, played on astroturf, re¬presented the first match-up ever be¬tween Chicago and an M.C.L.A. (Mid¬west Club Lacrosse Association)team.Chicago built up an early lead as tri¬captain Ted Voorhees went to the netearly in the first quarter for his secondunassisted goal of the year. Althoughthe Boilermakers scored a few minuteslater, freshman Hugh Birch hit an out¬side corner midway through the secondquarter to put Chicago up 2-1 at thehalf. Purdue came back in the secondhalf with four answered goals to recorda victory.Player-Coach Scott Jordan, whilenoting that the Boilermakers “werenot much better than us, all told,’’ ack¬nowledged that Chicago essentiallyblew the game in the second half. “Wethrew away a possible victory becauseour offense simply couldn’t get to¬gether on anything. The first midfieldline had a very tough time and Pur¬due’s defense took advantage of ourweaknesses,” said Jordan. He alsopointed out that the stadium’s astroturffield may have given some of the players a few difficulties.The astroturf, however, didn’t ap¬pear to bother goalie Rob Kenner whorecorded ten saves in the first halfwhile allowing only one goal. GoalieDean Stermer, who finished the secondhalf, made twelve saves. The turf alsoseemed not to hinder midfielders MikeNoal and Frank Connolly who, accord¬ing to Jordan, “Performed well on full-field play and created several fast-break opportunities.” Jordan addedthat defensemen Tim Small and TomLees also had strong games as didrookie midfielders Ed Malone andSteve Arnason.Chicago, presently 1-1 on the year,expects to continue improving as theseason progresses. While Purdue’s vic¬tory, said Jordan, “was a step back insome ways,” Chicago will probably notface too many teams capable of beat¬ing Purdue. Looking ahead to nextweek-end. the club hopes for a strongshowing against one of the Midwest’sfinest teams, The University of Michi¬gan. The game will be played here inHyde Park next Sunday.Purdue 5, Chicago 2CHICAGO 110 0-2PURDUE 1022-5Goals— Birch, VoorheesAssists — NoneSaves — Kenner. 10. Stermer, 12V<.G to let a similar defeat happen again.Before the game between the Chica¬go first side and the Northwestern firstside that the Maroons so eagerly await-rugbyPHOTO BY KC MORRISNorthwesternSaturdayed. the second sides from the twoschools took the pitch. Although theMaroons played with a lot of heart, ashortage of healthy backs hinderedtheir play, and the Wildcats prevailed.12-0. Excellent individual perfor¬mances were turned in by Bill Donnet.Greg Robertson, and George Sorletis,but these contributions were notenough to overcome a well disciplinedWildcat team.The U of C third side was next, pro¬viding a lot of excitement in a hardfought 0-0 tie against Northwestern’s third side. Although many of theMaroons were playing in their firstgame, these players displayed theheart and desire that characterizes Uof C rugby. Several players — includ¬ing Doug Hadley and Ed Michaels —performed extremely well, but a fewcostly mistakes prevented the Maroonsfrom putting any points on the board.Finally the time had come — the firstside of Chicago against NU’s first side.A bitter rivalry exists between thosetwo sides, and Northwestern especiallydesired a win since it hadn’t beatenChicago in its last four attempts. ButSaturday wasn’t their day, as theMaroon pack, led by Brian Coll, JeffMelgard, Steve Kapotas, and Mike Et-tinger, outmuscled and overpoweredtheir opponents, winning and stealingthe ball from the Wildcats and feedingit to the backs to run with. And run theydid. Superb back play by Guy Seaton,Tom Powell, Roger Raichelson, andDon Neding enabled the Maroons togain huge chunks of yardage and weardown the Wildcats.Although the Maroons were clearlythe superior team, they scored only onetry, when Melgard and Coll pounced ona ball in the end-zone, and the gameended with the Maroons ahead, 6-3. Thescore, however, was not indicative ofthe domination displayed by theMaroons. The sour taste left by the NIUdefeat had not faded, and it is doubtfulthat it will fade throughout the seasonahead.Order of the CannouncementThe Undergraduate Order of the Cwill hold a meeting tomorrow night at7:30 p.m. at the Henry Crown FieldHouse classroom. April Weekend andthe Banquet will be discussed at themeeting.Sports CalendarBaseball — Thursday, April 12, vs. Illinois Tech. 3 p.m., at Stagg FieldSoftball — Tuesday, April 10, at Lake Forest College. 3 p m."E.R.A. AND ABORTION: THE IMPLICATIONS"From Recent U.S. Senate TestimonyJOHN T. NOONAN, Jr., SpeakerProfessor, Legal History, University of California, BerkeleyALAN DONAGAN, Introductory RemarksProfessor, Philosophy, University of ChicagoFriday, April 13 • 4:15 p.m.Law School - Classroom 2, near Auditorium— Sponsored by U.C. Pro-Life Association —The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, April 10, 1984—13CLASSIFIEDADVERTISINGClassified advertising in the Chicago Maroon is$2 for the first line and $1 for each additionalline. Lines are 45 characters long INCLUDINGspaces and punctuation. Special headings are20 character lines at $2 per line. Ads are not ac¬cepted over the phone, and they must be paidin advance. Submit all ads in person or by mailto The Chicago Maroon, 1212 E. 59th St.,Chicago, III. 60637 ATTN Classified Ads. Ouroffice is in Ida Noyes Rm. 304. Deadlines:Wednesday noon for the Friday issue, Fridaynoon for the Tuesday issue. Absolutely no ex¬ceptions will be made! In case of errors forwhich the Maroon is responsible, adjustmentswill be made or corrections run only if thebusiness office is notified WITHIN ONECALENDAR WEEK of the original publ'cation. The Maroon is not liable for any errors.SPACEAiry Spacious Condo for Sale 2 Bedrooms 2Baths Lakeview Woodparquet Floors Wellmaintained Building Call 947-4085 or 955 4560Accepting app. for studios avail beg. May 1.Quiet, non smoking grad stud pref. 241 6875leave mess. 667-5153. 3:00 to 8:00pm.CONDO FOR SALE BY OWNER Ideal forstudents or faculty. 3 BR 54th 8. Greenwood onUC mini bus route. Bldg well managed S52,400.241-7208.STUDIO available in JUNE. Large w/newkitch secure bldg Indry 57 & BLKSTN call 2417280PLEASE!!! Sublet my large 4rm apt onEverett $410/mo avail immed! Call MaureenHome 643 5642 work 962-1700Summer Sublet: 5462 S. Woodlawn/2bedroom/Safe building/Dishwasher/Washer &Dryer/Rent negotiable/Call 493-3104ELEGANT2 BEDROOM CON DOEnd unit, lots of Sun, Lg. rooms and closets.Exposed wood, Levolor blinds, Washer &Dryer, Secure parking, 52nd & Greenwood,Avail. July $62,500 Phone Tom 962 7292(D) 6433011.(E)3 BR tri-level in private setting near Lake inBeverly Shores, Ind. 45 min. from U of C by caror train. Basement, C. air. $70,000. Call RenardAt Callahan Realty 219 962-4298.ROOM AVAIL NOW in huge 4 bdrm., 2 bathcondo new CLEAN kitch & baths S169/mo INCL. HEAT 53rd & Dorchester. Call 667 4251 or664 3641.Can Be 2 Or 3 Bdrm.56th & Kimbark, Oak Firs., Sunny Well KeptBldg Full OR, $60,000. Call 876-3512 OR 947-9432Fern rmmte to share beaut frnshd apt close tocampus $275 Avail anytime in April CallMiriam 667-0445 or leave message 263-1889 or674-3715.2 br UofC faculty apt Assume lease which runsto end of Sept w/possible renewal One block frcampus, good sunny exposure & a view Avail 1June Call evenings 324-4329. bus, train & lake, laundry, sun deck, May 1 ornow, ideal for single, $320. 221-6606.LARGE STUDIO with full kitchen & dinetteavail June 1 or end Spring Qtr. 55th &Blackstone. $300 includes utilities. SAFE &QUIET. Call 363-4683 AM or evenings.Room for rent in house near 57th & Drexel. Call643-8180.Fern grad stud or wkg wmn to share beaut2bdrm on Hyde Pk Blvd & 54th $225 avail imm.288 2622.SUMMER SUBLET 51st & S Hyde Park 4Bdrms 3 Baths, Fully Furnished (TV too),spacious, Lake View $140/room/month Call288 2027.Summer Sublet-very small but clean andsecure eff apt. Available June Oct $255 per mo.684 8922.Studios, one, two & 3 Bedrms some Lake viewsHeat included. Laundry facilities. Parkingavailable 5% Student Discounts. HerbertRealty. 684-2333 9-4:30 Mon - Fri.SPACE WANTEDSerious, quiet mature grad student seekingspace in apartment with similarly minded persons. Prefer year lease starting summerquarter I need a large room in a place withstorage space Call collect 319-351 7684.Prof, seeks 3 4 bdrm. house/apt Hyde Parkacad. yr. '84 5. Call Gene collect 415-524 5589eves, or 415-642 4670days.Couple sk Ige APT TOWNHOUSE w yard forlate Spring or Fall. Call Walter at 962-3200x270.FOR SALE72 Nova 2 door good condition 6 cylinder call288-5295after 6 p.m. or weekends.DATSUN '79 210 Wagon - 4-spd stk, am/fm,rear def, radials, exc maint, one owner, norust, 39,000 mi, $2600. Call 363-5508 eves.Dodge Van for sale Slantsix (cylinder), 15 20mpg, with ladder rack. Good engine, goodtransmission, good tires $600. Bill 493 9122AGFAFILMSALE3 rolls Agfachrome 200 reg $25.00 spec $14.95Model Camera 1342 E. 55th St. 493-6700CARPETING. 1 rm. Brown, 1 Tan. Must SellBy Sun. Best Offer. Call 947-8121 Jim orSharon.PEOPLE WANTEDTEST YOURSELF. Can you manage your timeproductively? Work 2-4 hrs/wk consistently?Are you success oriented? Self motivated?Marketing position available on campus. 1 800-243 6679.Jackson Pk Sailboat has space for 4 m/f crew,w'ends May to Nov. some overnite. No $, butlots of beer, fun and work on club races. Mayconsid depen novice, no smok aboard. 651-2843Word Processor. 10 20 hours/week. IBM PCKnowledge of Wordstar a plus. Contact: JanetArbor 962 8199. Professional Word Processor (IBM) 363-0522.Passport Photos while U wait.Model Camera, 1342 E 55th. 493-6700FAST FRIENDLY TYPING - Resumes,papers, all materials. Pick-up & delivery. Call924 4449.GOLDEN EAGLE MOVINGHousehold Commercial PianosILL. CC 54807MC-C Insured 594 2086MOVING SERVICE. LOWEST RATES,reliable for furniture, boxes, etc. call LARRY743 1353.French TUTORING, proofreading by ex¬perienced native teacher, MA French Philogy752 5577.NEED A BABYSITTER? PhD Stu wife willbabysit & can teach. Have exp. & refs call 624-7256.RACQUET STRINGING Tennis, Racquetball,& Squash racquets professionally strung 1DAY SERVICE Call KevinShalla 241-7991.SCENESYou May Be Missing The BEST BREAKFASTIN Hyde Park. The Medici on 57th Street is nowserving breakfast. We serve breakfast from7:30 to 11:30 every weekday. Hot-from the-oven Croissants, Omlets, Waffles, PancakesEggsetera - and our incredible coffee, ofcourse. We look forward to making yourbreakfast. Tasty One!!!KADIMA present an Introduction to the Symbols, Rituals, and Ideas of the Passover SederThursday, April 19, 5:15 pm, Cobb 107, $3.50. Alight supper will be served. Call Rebecca at288 8032 by April 15.Venex a la recontre des BEAUX PARLEURS(Club Francais) le Jeudi 12 avril a 8h du soir aIda Noyes—preparations pour la suireemusicale avec le band trancais EMBALLAGEPERDY (4/12) Renseignements: Lesa 947 0659(SGFC).Important Order ot the "C" meeting Wednesday at 7:30 in the classroom. Nominations, etc.PERSONALSHei Kaarel—tere, tere, van a kere! Hang inthere!4TH YEARUNDERGRADUATESEarn $4.00 in less than 30 minutes by par¬ticipating in a study on long term memory.Call 962 8859, after lpm.NOT FEELINGAS HOT AS THEWEATHER YET?Has the coming of Spring left you behind in thecold of winter? Is there a problem you thoughtwould go away over break that didn't? Afraidto come out of winter hibernation? Call us atthe Hotline if you want to talk. You can call usseven days a week, 7pm-7am at 753-1777. the Center's Educational Coordinator, DonCrabb, at 962-7173 or via DEC-20 MM toSTAFF. DONCRABB.BUCKS FOR BRAINS!People needed tor studies on how the twohalves of the brain work. Simple memory andperceptual tasks. Pays cash, Right & left¬handers call 962-8846, 9-5.ANXIOUS?SEEKING TREATMENT?Selected volunteers will receive free anxietytreatment at the University Medical Center inreturn for participation in a 3 week evaluationof drug preference. Participants will alsoreceive $60.00 in return for their participationin the evaluation. Participants must be 21years of age. Involves only commonlyprescribed drugs at therapeutic doses. Call962 3560 for information or to volunteer MonFri, 10:30am-3:00pm.LESBIAN? GAY?GALA holds a Discussion/Coffeehouse everyTue. at 9pm at 5615 S. Woodlawn. Friends foodconversation in unpressured setting 962 9734.COMPUTATION CENTERTOURSOFUSITEThe Computation Center will offer tours of theUSITE computer facility again this quarter -from Monday, April 2 through Thursday April19. The tours will be offered according to thefollowing schedule:MONDAY & TUESDAY - 12 noonWEDNESDAY&THURSDAY -4:40p.m.Each tour lasts approximately 20 minutes andcovers the various equipment and facilitiesavailable to computer users at USITE. Thetours will begin in USITE at the bust of WaltWhitman.VIDEO COMPUTERCLASSESEach month the Computer Center makesavailable to its customers several kinds ofcomputer courses on videotape (which are supplemented by written materials). Thesecourses are either supplied by an outside ven¬dor (DELTAK) and are available at low cost($10.00 per course module) or are produced bythe Center and are available at no charge.The following video courses are available toruse at the USITE Self-Study Facility in Weibolt310. Further information on course rental anduse is available from the USITE business office and the USITE terminal attendant. DuringApril we have the following DELTAK coursesfor rental ($10.00each):THE FORTRAN PROGRAMMINGLANGUAGE SERIES(modules 1-4)-Introduction to FORTRAN-The Basic FORTRAN Program-FORTRAN Input/Output Techniques-Selection Structures in FORTRAN5th roommate to share lg coed apt. Nonsmoking grad/professional only. Priv rm, sharecooking, near D bus stop. $154 inc ht. 493-5245.SUMMER SUBLET-2 bedrooms available,$180/month, one block away from 1C and onJeffrey express, furnished, call 752-3521.lbr in 3br apt 54th & Kimbark. Laundry inbldg, close to Mr. G, sunporch. Until June 15.624-3145 Carol.CONDO FOR SALE Spacious, beautifullyrenovated 4>/2 room in grt location. 1BR, modkit, DR, oak firs, molded ceilings, no bugs, excell managmt, low taxes & assmt, $44500, 6432934.Two x Two bedrooms, 54th & Greenwood, oneavailable now at 450.00 and one in August at475.00. Phone 241-7208 for details.Neat and Clean tenants wanted for newlyrenovated apts at 52nd and Dorchester. VerySpacious 3 bedrooms. 750.00/month & 800.00security. Phone for details 241-7208.IN GORGEOUS CLASSIC BLDG in integratedSo. Shore on Drive, 1 bedroom excellent security & upkeep, cptd, heat, has stove & refrig, byAPARTMENTSTORRENTGRAFF &CHECK1617 E. 55th St.Spacious, nowfy-docoratod Vh, Vh,studies & 1 bidroewapartments in a i^uietweM maintained buildingBU8-5566 i HELP WANTED/WAIT PEOPLEMellow Yellow, 1508 E. 53rd, now hiring full &pt time waitstaff for its busy season. We offergood pay & training in exchange for highenergy & a positive, prof, approach to yourwork. Apply Eliz. M-F 9-11 p.m.SERVICESJUDITH TYPES-and has a memory. Phone955 4417.JAMES BONE Processor/Typist/Editor: 363-0522PRECISION PLUS TYPING IBM WordProcessor-Fast accurate service includesediting. 324-1660.Moving and Hauling. Discount prices to staffand students from $12/hr. With van, or helpersfor trucks. Free cartons delivered N/C Pack¬ing and Loading services. Many other ser¬vices. References. Bill 493-9122.Passport photos while you wait. On Campus.Other photo services available. 962-6263.TYPING Experienced Secretary typesReports, Dissertations, Tables - All Material,Grammar Corrected. 1 Day Service MostCases. 667 8657.Roosevelt Univ LSAT GMAT Prep Loop &Suburbs, Free Sample Class at RU 6.30 LSAT5/17, GMAT 5/16.341 3660.We Have The Lowest Airfares To Europe AndAcross America! For Free Color Brochure,Write to: Campus Travel-Box 11387 St. Louis,Mo. 63105.CHMCSt-AMEMCAN RESTAURANTSpecializing in Cantoneseand American dishes.Open Doily 11 A.-8.30 P.M.Closed MnndnvHit l.ttrd MU 4-1042 WANT TO LEARN TOUSE COMPUTERS?ATTEND THE COMPUTATION CENTERCLASSES FOR SPRING QUARTER. TheComputation Center is once again offering aseries of free non-credit seminars and low costnon-credit courses on computing topics for theUniversity community during spring quarter.These classes begin on April 6 and continuethrough May.A schedule and description of these seminarsand courses is available from the Center at thefollowing locations: Usite Business Office(Wieboldt 310), from 9:00 to 4:00, Monday-Friday; Main Business Office (Merriam 164,1313 E. 60th), from 8:30 to 4:30, Monday - Fri¬day at the Staff Office Building (5737 S. Univer¬sity), 8:30 to 5:00, Monday - Friday, Copies ofthe schedule may also be obtained from theSocial Science Advisor in Pick 123, the Pro¬gram Advisor at Usite and the Terminal Atten¬dant at Usite.The seminars offer introductions and over¬views to topics of general computing interest:computer concepts, fundamentals of com¬puting, computerized text processing,microcomputing, and database architecture.Our seminars also discuss how to use specificsoftware on the DEC-20 computers; introduc¬tion to the DEC-20's, Edit/Runoff text editingand formatting, SED full screen text editing,Tell-a-graf and Cuechart graphics, NCPcalcspreadsheet, SCSS statistical analysis, andhow to use the DEC-20's as personal com¬puters. Finally, the seminars discuss specificsoftware available on the IBM computersystem: the MVS operating system, Super-wylbur, the ACF2 security program, IBM textprocessing (TREATISE, SCRIPT, GML), andSAS/GRAPH.In addition to the seminars we teach a five partcourse on the MUSE word processing systemavailable on the DEC-20's (the fee for thiscourse has been waived for spring quarter)and a six-part course on using SPSSX on theIBM system (the cost is $30.00, which includescomputer time).To register for the MUSE course, call YvonneMcNear at 962-7173. Registration for theSPSSX course is handled at the Usite BusinessOffice in Wieboldt 310. Some of our seminarsalso require phone-in registration; see thecomplete schedule of classes for further in¬formation.!f you have questions about the classes offered(e.g. content and intended audience) contact THE PASCAL PROGRAMMING LANGUAGESERIES(modules 1-4)-Getting Started With Pascal-Think of a Number-Doing Arithmetic-Being ChooseyWe also have available (for no charge)videotaped Center seminars:THE FUNDAMENTALS OF COMPUTING (3,90 minute videos)INTRODUCTION TO MICROCOMPUTINGAT THE U. OF C. (3, 90 minute videos)Finally, we also have a Center produced videoon ''GETTING STARTED AT USITE”available. For more information on any ofthese courses contact the Center's EducationalCoordinator, Don Crabb, at 962-7173 or viaDEC 20 MM to STAFF. DONCRABB.GAMES DAYOn Saturday, April 14, relax and enjoy yourselfat the Games Day at Ida Noyes Hall. PlayTrivial Pursuit, Dungeons and Dragons, Risk,Runequest, Monopoly, Diplomacy, Traveller,and many other boardgames, role-playinggames, and wargames. If you own a game thatyou want to play, bring it along! Some gameswill be there already. Novices are welcome.Sponsored by SGFC and the Fantasy GamersClub.ANXIOUS ABOUTEXAMS?The Dean of Students Office in the College is of¬fering a workshop for undergraduates whohave a problem with exam anxiety and whowould like to resolve it. For more informationcontact your College Advisor.LONELY OR UPSET?Are you angry about what a friend has toldyou? Mad at your boyfriend or girlfriend forbreaking up? Got something on your mind thatyou don't want a friend to know about? TheHotline is here if you want someone to listenand share You ran rail us seven <lavs a weekbetween 7pm & 7am. 753-1777.14—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, April 10, 1984VOTE NEWTON HALLS.G. SECRETARYPLEASEHe would really appreciate your vote.LIVE IN A DORM?GALA will be sponsoring a gay question andanswer session in Pierce Hall Wed. Apr 11,5:00-7:00 Anyone straight or gay, with com¬ments or questions is welcome.RESUME SERVICEExtensive type styles & paper selection. Pro¬mpt service. Copyworks 5210 S. Harper 288-2233.UCJAZZ BANDOrganizational meeting and rehearsal on WedApr 11 at 7:00 in Reynolds Club North Loungeeveryone encouraged to attend-especiallyrhythm players into J Harris643-4713 2 6046BIG BROTHERis laughing at you...1984: A South Side StoryApril 13 & 14. Ida Noyes Theater. 7:30. $1. mmmmmbegin this week! Sign up in SAO, room 210, IdaNoyes Hall.STATEWIDECONFERENCEThe II Lesbian and Gay Student Caucus will beholding its annual conterence April 13-14.There will be films, workshops and speakers.For information call GALA at 962 9734.LESBIAN?Come to the lesbian coming out workshop atIda Noyes, Sun April 15, 2:00-4:30. Meet peoplein a warm, unpressured setting. Call 924 5057 toregister.GAY? LESBIAN? THEMAKADO$17 and $9 discount tickets still available forthe Mikado with the London Savoyards onSaturday, April 14. Tickets available in SAO,room 210 Ida Noyes Hall.MIDWESTERN CIVThat's the theme for this year's FOTA artshow. Any medium! Anyone can enter! Get towork now! Look for more info in upcomingMaroons.GAY DORMSIf you're straight and have questions aboutyour gay neighbor or if you're gay and havecomments or questions, come to the gay ques¬tion and answer session. Woodward Ct. 4/12, 5-7pm.JAZZERCISE CLASSESJoin now for a high energy workout that combines the total body conditioning benefits ofaerobics with the fun of dance. Jazzerciseclasses are held at 6 and 7pm. On Tuesdays andThursdays in the Blue Gargoyle, 57th andUniversity Ave. Join Anytime. For more infocall 436 4115.ERA and ABORTIONDr. John T. Noonan, Jr. Professor of LegalPhilosophy and History, U.C.Berkeley—Remarks from recent Senatetestimony. This Friday 4:15; Law SchoolClassroom 2.KOREAN DINNER GALA holds its meeting every Tues at 9:00 at5615 S. Woodlawn. This week there will be adiscussion of coming out issues. Come shareyour experience.OBS MEETINGThe Organization of Black Students will haveits first meeting of the Spring quarter onWednesday April 11. Nominations for nextyears officers will take place.HISTORY SOCIALHOURThere will be a social hour for allundergraduate History majors and all personnel interested in History in SS224 on Wed. April11 from 4:30-6:30 sponsored by theUndergraduate History Association.Refreshments will be served.T-SHIRTSGALA will be selling T-shirts and buttons thisThursday in Reynolds Club and Tues and Wedin Cobb. Buy a button and wear it during Lesbian and Gay Awareness fortnight.WHO?...WOO!Vote for the DEMON Party. Woo Pres., AsnerV. P. Yasko-SGFC Chair, and Pittner Sec. Studios, 1 & 2 BedroomApartments AvailableSome Nice Lake ViewsGood LocationHeat IncludedParking AvailableCALLHERBERT REALTY684-23335 % Student Discounts9:00 A.M.-4:30 P.M.Monday thru FridayGAY POETRYWednesday, April 11. International House Din¬ing Room. 1414 E. 59th St. Korean authenticcuisine and complimentary beverages. 4:307:00pm. Admission open to public.ECLECTIC EDStill not too late to sign up for an Eclectic Edcourse in Jazz Dance, Ikebana, Aerobics,Ballroom Dance, Massage, Belly Dance, BluesHarmonica, Afro Dance and Yoga. Classes GALA is sponsoring a poetry reading in theBlue Gargoyle on Thurs April 12 from 12:001:00. GALA members will be reading poetry bymajor gay poets.THERE ISNOBEEF!Vote D.E.M.O.N. in the S.G. elections.Remember: A VOTE FOR WOO IS A VOTEFOR WOO!! rf 3MDD %L'/l . .. - v . •1 rThe Closer You Get The Better We Look!Hyde Park ’s Completely NewApartment ResidenceA Short Walk From The lake And:Harper Ct. • University of ChicagoThe /. C. • RestaurantsIncludes• Master T. V. Antenna • Sew Ceramic Tile• Ind Control Heat • Sew Appliances• Mall to Mall Carpeting • Sight Doormen• Central Air ConditioningI Bedroom from $405 - 2 Bedroom from $5255200 S. BLACKSTONE AVE.1 BLOCK WEST OF HARPER COURTMon.-Fri. 9-6 Sat. 12-6 Sun. 12-5■L- 684-H666Oodles.If you’re a senior and have the promise of a $10,000 career oriented job, doyou know how many good reasons there are for you to apply for theAmerican Express®Card?You guessed it.Lots.Because when you get the American Express Card now, you can useit for vacation travel, restaurants, hotels, and car rentals. As well as forshopping for things like a new stereo or clothes.And if you think you need the Card now, just wait until you’reworking. (It’s going to happen sooner than you think.) Then it will beabsolutely indispensable.So apply today. All you need is a $10,000 job.That’s it. No strings. Nogimmicks. And this offer is even good for 12 months after you graduate.Because American Express wants to show that we not only believe inyour future, but we also believe in you now. iJust call 800-528-8000 for a SpecialStudent Application or look for one atyour college bookstore or on yourcampus bulletin boards.The American Express Card. Don’tleave school without it.SMLook for an application on campus. MCSale Dates: April 11-1459*39*S139*99*89*89*49*69*69*$1292/99*PARKAYMARGARINELEMONSlb.BANANAS3 lbs.VINE RIPETOMATOESlb.STONEDWHEATTHINSHERRINGFILLETS6.5 oz.PEANUTBUTTER12 oz.ICEBERGLETTUCEheadEGG0PANCAKEBATTER16 oz.KLEENEXTISSUE175 ct.ARTICHOKEHEARTS15 oz.MOUNTAIN HIGHYOGURT6 oz.CHEESE OF THE WEEKFRENCH BRIEib t/*79$2KRAFT AMERICANSINGLES1 lb.GORTON'SFISH STICKS15 oz.KRAFTMIRACLEWHIPMAMA'SCOOKIES16 oz.INDIAN SUMMERAPPLE CIDER1 GALLONMOTTSAPPLESAUCE32 oz.OCEAN SPRAYCRANBERRYCOCKTAIL48 oz.SAFEGUARD $199$169$169$139$24999*49WtUUHHU A / AAlKBATH BAR 2/00tRED DELICIOUSAPPLESIb. 49CAm»fK*n1»pm»Tr»vrtRrl«fdSCT*lccfComp.ny. lnt IRAK FINER FOODSSERVINGPRAIRIE SHORESX! M 8 A R K rLA2A 29ftfre'e T ov. Am A S'*<iTnf 6».' On;*-The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, April 10, 1984—15THE COUNCIL ON RELIGIONAND INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRSinvites you to attend the third in its series ofEthics and Foreign Policy discussionswithDWIGHT PERKINSH. H. Burbank ProfessorDirector, Institute for International DevelopmentHarvard UniversityECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT INASIA: THE ROLE OF VALUESThursday, April 12,1984 - 5:00 PMSocial Science Research Building, Room 1221126 East 59th StreetHosts: The Committee on Public Policy Studies& The Center for Ethics and Public Affairs(312)962-8400 ExperiencesOfDifferentPerspectivesVINCENT GAUGHANFormer 1st Lt., Vietnam 1964-66Member, American LegionCook County Judge AdvocateBARRY ROMOFormer 1st Lt., Vietnam 1966-68National Co-ordinator,Vietnam Vets Against WarSTEWART HERMANProvincial Representative,Vietnam Christian Service 70-72Conscientious Objector SIDNEY LENSAnti-war Organizer,National Mobilization ComitteeSr. Editor, The ProgressiveNoted AuthorBRADFORD LYTTLEFormer National Secretary,Committee for Non-Violent ActionLogistics Co-ordinator,Washington Anti-War Marches 67-73.THURSDAY, APRIL 12 • 7:30 p.m.INTERNATIONAL HOUSE1414 E. 59th St.Free Admission - Everyone WelcomeSponsored by CAUSE • Funded by SGFCThe Visiting Fellows CommitteepresentsMARVIN L. GOLDBERGERPresident, California Institute of Technologyspeaking on“Science, Technology, andNational Security”- Questions /Answers to Follow -Thursday, April 12 Eckhart 1334:30 p.m.